ARMY OF CRIME (LORBER FILMS, NR)
Sarah Boslaugh
PlayBack
http://www.playbackstl.com/movie-reviews/9939-army-of-crime-lorber-films-nr
Oct 22 2010
The film's title expresses the official attitude of the occupied
French toward these resistance fighters; they were criminals who
interfered with the smooth operation of occupied Paris.
Army of Crime is set in Paris during the German Occupation and focuses
on a band of French resistance fighters led by the Armenian emigre
poet Missak Manouchian. I mention these details up front because
your enjoyment of this movie will have a lot to do with whether it
is the kind of movie you want to see. It will help if you have some
interest in the historical events portrayed, but you also need to
be open to the approach taken by director Robert Guediguian. He's
not trying to provide the modern Hollywood take on this story (not
enough action or movie stars recognizable to Americans) nor is he
taking the individual-to-the-point-of-eccentricity approach of, say,
Quentin Tarantino (no cartoonish wish-fulfillment episodes). Instead
Guediguian, working with a screenplay by Serge Le Peron and Gilles
Taurand, gives the good old-fashioned epic treatment to an important
chapter of history.
So what do we have the right to expect from a historical epic? First
of all, it should be a grand movie in both themes and scope (check)
that sets the human-scale stories of individual characters within a
broad historical drama (check). It should be planted with nuggets of
historical detail (check) and be presented with a first-rate technical
package including period-appropriate production design and costumes
(check). It also helps if good and evil are clearly demarcated (check),
but individual characters are also seen to struggle with issues of
ethics and morality-in particular, whether they should adjust their
judgment on such matters based on the unprecedented circumstances in
which they find themselves (check).
There have been many films about resistance fighters during World
War II, but Army of Crime offers something a little different.
Guediguian's particular line of interest is the complicity of ordinary
French people-from the police officers of Paris who explicitly
collaborate with the occupying German army to the concierge who
denounces her tenants to the authorities-and how quickly they closed
ranks against those they considered not truly French. This category
included both Jews and "foreigners," the latter encompassing not
only recently immigrants but also anyone with a foreign surname or
heritage. The film's title expresses the official attitude of the
occupied French toward these resistance fighters; they were criminals
who interfered with the smooth operation of occupied Paris.
Historical epics are seldom noted for their subtlety, and Army of Crime
is no exception. It's useful to think of it as a parable drawing on
the conventions of the epic film in order to illustrate a point of
view; in this case, that the truest subscribers to the French ideals
of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity were not the native-born French
but the emigres and their offspring who believed such values were
truly worth dying for. This point is underlined from the first as we
hear a roll call of those who "died for France" bearing names that
are Italian, Jewish, Hungarian-anything but French.
Many scenes in Army of Crime serve an expository purpose. Take an
early scene in which a Jewish mother says her family has nothing to
fear because 1) France is the land of freedom, 2) their papers are in
order and 3) Dad knows someone at City Hall. Any guesses as to how
that worked out for them? Or take an early instance of anti-Semitic
harassment, followed up with a scene in which a school principal
assures the victim that "this place is neutral," so he should refrain
from political expressions on campus. We even get to see a police
supervisor instructing his men to cooperate fully with the German
army in the effort to hunt down "foreign terrorists."
These scenes would be problematic if Army of Crime was meant to
be a naturalistic film, but it's clearly not aiming for that goal
(epics seldom do). By its own standards it succeeds very well and
offers considerable food for thought about France's attitude toward
the non-French (by racial/ethnic definition) who form so large a
part of contemporary French society. Among the stories woven into its
tapestry are that of Armenian poet Missak Manouchian (Simon Abkarian)
and his wife Melinee (Virginie Ledoyen), the Jewish swimmer/assassin
Marcel Rayman (Robinson Stevenin), the Hungarian emigre Thomas Elek
(Gregoire Leprince-Ringuet) and the Polish communist Henri Krasucki
(Adrien Jolivet). There are a lot of family members as well, but
despite the large cast it's never a problem to keep the storyline
straight. This is in part because the score by Alexandre Desplat
helpfully tags the major characters with ethnically-appropriate music
(and for scenes of martyrdom he uses Bach's St. Matthew Passion).
There are plenty of historical breadcrumbs dropped in the script.
Early on we hear a review of the Nazi propaganda film Der ewige Jude
(The Eternal Jew: it's the film that likens Jews to rats spreading
disease through Europe). Later, the camera zeroes in on a biography
of General Petain in a bookstore, and a photograph of him is used by
our heroes for target practice. One of the characters finds a truly
revolutionary purpose for a volume of Das Capital, and the screenplay
helpfully lets us know it was published in Fraktur. Like the explicitly
expository scenes, these are part of the genre conventions and,
as such, do their work effectively.
At over two hours in length, Army of Crime may try the patience of
people uninterested in its subject or accustomed to the faster pace
of commercial American movies. However, those who are willing and
able to immerse themselves in the experience it offers will find
themselves amply rewarded. | Sarah Boslaugh
From: A. Papazian
Sarah Boslaugh
PlayBack
http://www.playbackstl.com/movie-reviews/9939-army-of-crime-lorber-films-nr
Oct 22 2010
The film's title expresses the official attitude of the occupied
French toward these resistance fighters; they were criminals who
interfered with the smooth operation of occupied Paris.
Army of Crime is set in Paris during the German Occupation and focuses
on a band of French resistance fighters led by the Armenian emigre
poet Missak Manouchian. I mention these details up front because
your enjoyment of this movie will have a lot to do with whether it
is the kind of movie you want to see. It will help if you have some
interest in the historical events portrayed, but you also need to
be open to the approach taken by director Robert Guediguian. He's
not trying to provide the modern Hollywood take on this story (not
enough action or movie stars recognizable to Americans) nor is he
taking the individual-to-the-point-of-eccentricity approach of, say,
Quentin Tarantino (no cartoonish wish-fulfillment episodes). Instead
Guediguian, working with a screenplay by Serge Le Peron and Gilles
Taurand, gives the good old-fashioned epic treatment to an important
chapter of history.
So what do we have the right to expect from a historical epic? First
of all, it should be a grand movie in both themes and scope (check)
that sets the human-scale stories of individual characters within a
broad historical drama (check). It should be planted with nuggets of
historical detail (check) and be presented with a first-rate technical
package including period-appropriate production design and costumes
(check). It also helps if good and evil are clearly demarcated (check),
but individual characters are also seen to struggle with issues of
ethics and morality-in particular, whether they should adjust their
judgment on such matters based on the unprecedented circumstances in
which they find themselves (check).
There have been many films about resistance fighters during World
War II, but Army of Crime offers something a little different.
Guediguian's particular line of interest is the complicity of ordinary
French people-from the police officers of Paris who explicitly
collaborate with the occupying German army to the concierge who
denounces her tenants to the authorities-and how quickly they closed
ranks against those they considered not truly French. This category
included both Jews and "foreigners," the latter encompassing not
only recently immigrants but also anyone with a foreign surname or
heritage. The film's title expresses the official attitude of the
occupied French toward these resistance fighters; they were criminals
who interfered with the smooth operation of occupied Paris.
Historical epics are seldom noted for their subtlety, and Army of Crime
is no exception. It's useful to think of it as a parable drawing on
the conventions of the epic film in order to illustrate a point of
view; in this case, that the truest subscribers to the French ideals
of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity were not the native-born French
but the emigres and their offspring who believed such values were
truly worth dying for. This point is underlined from the first as we
hear a roll call of those who "died for France" bearing names that
are Italian, Jewish, Hungarian-anything but French.
Many scenes in Army of Crime serve an expository purpose. Take an
early scene in which a Jewish mother says her family has nothing to
fear because 1) France is the land of freedom, 2) their papers are in
order and 3) Dad knows someone at City Hall. Any guesses as to how
that worked out for them? Or take an early instance of anti-Semitic
harassment, followed up with a scene in which a school principal
assures the victim that "this place is neutral," so he should refrain
from political expressions on campus. We even get to see a police
supervisor instructing his men to cooperate fully with the German
army in the effort to hunt down "foreign terrorists."
These scenes would be problematic if Army of Crime was meant to
be a naturalistic film, but it's clearly not aiming for that goal
(epics seldom do). By its own standards it succeeds very well and
offers considerable food for thought about France's attitude toward
the non-French (by racial/ethnic definition) who form so large a
part of contemporary French society. Among the stories woven into its
tapestry are that of Armenian poet Missak Manouchian (Simon Abkarian)
and his wife Melinee (Virginie Ledoyen), the Jewish swimmer/assassin
Marcel Rayman (Robinson Stevenin), the Hungarian emigre Thomas Elek
(Gregoire Leprince-Ringuet) and the Polish communist Henri Krasucki
(Adrien Jolivet). There are a lot of family members as well, but
despite the large cast it's never a problem to keep the storyline
straight. This is in part because the score by Alexandre Desplat
helpfully tags the major characters with ethnically-appropriate music
(and for scenes of martyrdom he uses Bach's St. Matthew Passion).
There are plenty of historical breadcrumbs dropped in the script.
Early on we hear a review of the Nazi propaganda film Der ewige Jude
(The Eternal Jew: it's the film that likens Jews to rats spreading
disease through Europe). Later, the camera zeroes in on a biography
of General Petain in a bookstore, and a photograph of him is used by
our heroes for target practice. One of the characters finds a truly
revolutionary purpose for a volume of Das Capital, and the screenplay
helpfully lets us know it was published in Fraktur. Like the explicitly
expository scenes, these are part of the genre conventions and,
as such, do their work effectively.
At over two hours in length, Army of Crime may try the patience of
people uninterested in its subject or accustomed to the faster pace
of commercial American movies. However, those who are willing and
able to immerse themselves in the experience it offers will find
themselves amply rewarded. | Sarah Boslaugh
From: A. Papazian