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Film Review: The Army of Crime (L'Armee du Crime)

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  • Film Review: The Army of Crime (L'Armee du Crime)

    Film Review: The Army of Crime (L'Armee du Crime)

    Dir. Robert Guediguian. France, 2009. 139 min.

    ScreenDaily.com
    18 May, 2009

    By Dan Fainaru

    Timed for release at a point when France is battling issues of
    xenophobia, The Army Of Crime chronicles the famous `Red Poster' case in
    wartime France when a group of foreign partisans defied French apathy to
    form their own resistance against the Nazis. The story has been told
    before in Frank Cassenti's 1976 L'Affiche Rouge, but Guediguian takes a
    different approach here. Well-intentioned though it is, The Army of
    Crime's excessive running time is an impediment, and its academic take
    means it will probably ultimately work better on the small screen.

    With a large cast of name actors including Ariane Ascaride and
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin (both Guediguian veterans) and Virginie Ledoyen,
    coupled with a strong technical team, this handsome production should
    also perform well for StudioCanal on DVD. Certainly, its theme deserves
    all the attention it can get.

    Exiled Armenian poet Missak Manouchian (Abkarian), living in occupied
    Paris with his wife, Melinee (Ledoyen), takes charge of an underground
    resistance unit determined to fight the Nazi occupiers. Though a
    pacifist at heart, he feels impelled tot take action with a group of
    mostly young hotheads from all parts of the world, barely out of their
    teens. The Germans rely on the French police to quell the insurgents at
    first, but after the murder of a high-ranking general they ramp up the
    pressure and Manouchian and his people are caught and tortured.

    Their case is put on the famous `Red Poster' distributed throughout
    France in which they are denounced as `The Army of Crime'. Needless to
    say, they are put on trial and found guilty without exception. Execution
    awaits.

    Guediguian sticks to an episodic format throughout The Army of Crime,
    from the overlong introduction presenting his sprawling cast of
    characters, down to their final demise. This constant jumping from one
    mini-plot to another makes any kind of attachment to the characters
    difficult to achieve. He stays close to the actual events of the time,
    and if there is some minor retouching of the chronology, it does not
    affect the film's overall impact.

    Guediguian deals competently with several running themes, chief amongst
    them being the multi-ethnic nature of Manouchian's group, which included
    Jews, Poles, Italians, Spaniards and of course Armenians. He also
    touches on the Val d'hiver mass arrests of Jews who were later deported
    from Drancy to Auschwitz, and the French co-operation with the Nazis.

    Despite or maybe because of the cast's size it's difficult to assess
    individual performances. In fact, Guediguian tries to throw so much into
    the pot there's not enough time to shake the audience out of their every
    day lives. They will look, understand what it's all about but never, for
    one second, forget they are in a movie house and the people up there are
    actors.


    Production companies:
    Agat Films
    StudioCanal
    France 3 Cinema

    Producers:
    Dominique Barneaud
    Marc Bordure
    Robert Guediguian

    International Sales:
    StudioCanal
    (33) 1 71 35 08 85

    Screenplay:
    Robert Guediguian
    Serge Le Peron
    Gilles Taurand

    Cinematography:
    Pierre Milon

    Production Design:
    Michel Vandestien

    Editing:
    Bernard Sasia

    Music:
    Alexandre Desplat

    Main Cast:
    Simon Abkarian
    Virginie Ledoyen
    Robinson Stevenin
    Gregoire Leprince-Ringuet
    Ariane Ascaride
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    Olga Legrand
    Pierre Niney
    Adrien Jolivet
    Ivan Franek
    Mirza Halilovic
    Horatiu Malaele
    Lola Naymark


    http://www.screendaily.com/5001319.artic le
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