Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

DVD Rent Or Buy: Army Of Crime

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • DVD Rent Or Buy: Army Of Crime

    RENT OR BUY

    The Oxford Times
    http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/leisure/4850124 .Parky_at_the_Pictures__DVD_14_1_2010_/
    Jan 14 2010
    UK

    For a brief period around the turn of the century, Marseilles-based
    auteur Robert Guédiguian had a voguish arthouse cachet. Notable for
    their intelligence, economy and realist poetry, Marius et Jeannette
    (1997), Ã~@ la place du coeur (1998), Ã~@ l'attaque! and La Ville est
    tranquille (both 2000) were all acclaimed by British critics. Yet only
    The Last Mitterand (2005) has since secured UK theatrical distribution,
    with fine films like Marie-Jo and Her Two Lovers (2002), My Father
    Is an Engineer (2004) and Lady Jane (2008) being consigned to the
    festival circuit.

    Comparisons with Army of Shadows (1969) clearly prompted the decision
    to release Guédiguian's latest offering, Army of Crime. But anyone
    hoping for a powerhouse picture on a par with Jean-Pierre Melville's
    seminal study of the Maquis or another of Guédiguian's intense
    political provocations will be somewhat disappointed.

    The infamous `Red Poster' campaign conducted by the Vichy government
    against the immigrant resistance movement Francs Tireurs et Partisans
    de la Main d'Oeuvre Immigrée (FTP-MOI) had previously been recalled in
    Frank Cassenti's little-seen drama, L'Affiche rouge (1976). But while
    Guédiguian, production designer Michel Vandestien and cinematographer
    Pierre Milon ably recreate the look and feel of occupied France, the
    fractured nature of the narrative prevents the action from gaining
    the momentum that might have heightened the tension surrounding the
    activities that led to the arrest and execution of pamphleteering
    Armenian poet Simon Abkarian, Romanian revolutionary Olga Legrand,
    Marxist Hungarian explosives expert Grégoire Leprince-Ringuet and
    Polish-Jewish assassin, Robinson Stévenin.

    Surprisingly for such a politicised film-maker, there is also a notable
    lack of ideological debate, which might have rooted the reckless
    heroism in something more tangible than the righteous revulsion felt at
    the round-up of Jews at the Vélodrome d'Hiver in Paris and the Drancy
    internment camp. But if Abkarian's sudden transformation from pacifist
    to machine-gunning opportunist strains credibility, the introduction
    of collaborationist detective Jean-Pierre Darroussin shifts the focus
    of the storyline on to his attempts to seduce Stévenin's girlfriend,
    Lola Naymark, in the hope that she will betray her comrades while
    seeking to protect them.

    Indeed, it's the business of the plot that most consistently
    undermines this noble attempt to reclaim the contribution made
    by refugees to the Liberation from the `one nation' propaganda of
    Gaullist patriots. Guédiguian demonstrated a flair for interweaving
    multiple strands in La Ville est tranquille. But he seems hampered
    here by the weight of history, as he strives to make each passing
    character seem significant. Moreover, he also struggles to find
    enough for Virginie Ledoyen to do as Abkarian's pugnacious wife,
    while such regular members of his stock company as Ariane Ascaride
    and Gérard Meylan are restricted to bit parts.

    Army of Crime contains some striking set-pieces and moments of
    sickening authenticity. But its chief achievement is to provide a
    motivational counterbalance to the existential valour of Melville's
    romanticised guerillas and the perky pluck of the glamour gals
    in Jean-Paul Salomé's Female Agents. Perhaps more importantly,
    however, this rather studious tribute to the unknown underground
    offers a corrective to the dumbed-down antics depicted in such recent
    Hollywood excursions to the Second World War as Tom Cruise's vacuous
    star vehicle, Valkyrie, and Quentin Tarantino's eminently resistible
    revisionist romp, Inglourious Basterds.
Working...
X