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J'accuse

  • 1919
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 46min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.7/10
2.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
J'accuse (1919)
DramaHorrorWar

La historia de dos hombres, uno casado y el otro amante de la mujer del otro, que se conocen en las trincheras de la Primera Guerra Mundial, y cómo su historia se convierte en un microcosmos... Leer todoLa historia de dos hombres, uno casado y el otro amante de la mujer del otro, que se conocen en las trincheras de la Primera Guerra Mundial, y cómo su historia se convierte en un microcosmos de los horrores de la guerra.La historia de dos hombres, uno casado y el otro amante de la mujer del otro, que se conocen en las trincheras de la Primera Guerra Mundial, y cómo su historia se convierte en un microcosmos de los horrores de la guerra.

  • Dirección
    • Abel Gance
  • Guionista
    • Abel Gance
  • Elenco
    • Romuald Joubé
    • Maxime Desjardins
    • Séverin-Mars
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.7/10
    2.3 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Abel Gance
    • Guionista
      • Abel Gance
    • Elenco
      • Romuald Joubé
      • Maxime Desjardins
      • Séverin-Mars
    • 20Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 32Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Fotos21

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    Elenco principal10

    Editar
    Romuald Joubé
    Romuald Joubé
    • Jean Diaz
    Maxime Desjardins
    Maxime Desjardins
    • Maria Lazare
    Séverin-Mars
    Séverin-Mars
    • François Laurin
    Angèle Guys
    • Angele
    Maryse Dauvray
    Maryse Dauvray
    • Edith Laurin
    Mancini
    • Jean's Mother
    Elizabeth Nizan
    Pierre Danis
    Blaise Cendrars
    Paul Duc
    • Orphan
    • Dirección
      • Abel Gance
    • Guionista
      • Abel Gance
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios20

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    Opiniones destacadas

    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    Almost as large in scope as '"Intolerance".

    The only attempt to make a peace film during the war was in France, by the great Abel Gance...

    'J'accuse' is almost as large in scope as 'Intolerance'. The director said that: 'It was intended to show that if war did not serve some purpose, then it was a terrible waste. If it had to be waged, then a man's death must achieve something.'

    "J'accuse" is a triangle story of Edith (Marise Dauvray), her husband François Laurin (Severin-Mars) and Jean Diaz (Romould Joube), a poet who is in love with Edith... The three, however, are puppets in the hands of war...

    Edith is taken captive and returns with a child... François and Jean... Well you have to see the film!

    All this now seems excessively melodramatic and not entirely impartial, but visually "J'accuse" is an extremely powerful film and it certainly had an impact on contemporary audiences...

    The film was remade by Abel Gance in 1937 in an attempt to warn against the impending World War II...
    8springfieldrental

    First Anti-War Movie

    With the French losing almost one and a half million soldiers during the Great War, some of France's citizens deliberated whether the great cost in lives was worth the loses. Included in that group was Abel Gance, who wrote and directed the first anti-war movie in cinema, April 1919's "J'Accuse." The film, graphically displaying the carnage that took place over four years in his home country, was an instant classic and was heralded worldwide as accurately describing what shocks civilization sustained from 1914-1918.

    A bout with tuberculosis decided Gance's fate in the war when, after being drafted into the French Army, he was shortly discharged for the illness. During the tail end of the war, after hearing the sad stories from his friends on the Western Front, he yearned to produce a movie about the trials they went through--as well as those of civilians far behind the battle lines. He received funding from Pathe, which became surprised at Gance's astronomical final production costs. But in the end, the box office success throughout continental Europe as well as D. W. Griffith's, who had viewed the film and was so impressed by it, control of its lucrative United States distribution, the film studio made an enormous profit from "J'Accuse."

    To give the movie its authenticity, Gance re-enlisted in the French Army in its Section Cinématographique and filmed portions of the September 1918 Battle of Saint-Mihiel with the United States Army. His footage interweaves with other portions in the last third of "J'Accuse," which focuses on the front lines of the war.

    As critics have pointed out, the first two-thirds play out as a melodrama, introducing the main protagonists, two men vying for the love of Edith, who is married to one of them, an abusive, jealous husband. The poet, who can be Gance in disguise, is the other, a pacifist who has been discharged from service due to illness. Ask if "J'Accuse' is more a pacifist film than an anti-war one, Gance replied, "I'm not interested in politics... But I am against war, because war is futile. Ten or twenty years afterward, one reflects that millions have died and all for nothing. One has found friends among one's old enemies, and enemies among one's friends." The two love interests of Edith end up comrades on the front when the poet re-enlists. Several sequences in that last third of the movie stick in viewers' minds: the soldiers, during a lull, write letters to loved ones at home (these are actual letters written by battle-hardened soldiers); the phantom of death walking among the soldiers preparing for an assault; and the recreated hand-to-hand encounters between the two opposing armies.

    The "J'Accuse's" highlight, and the one studied in film schools today, is the "March of the Dead" sequence towards the film's conclusion. Gance was able to get two thousand French soldiers on leave to volunteer their time in acting as corpses from the battles rising from the ground. In what can be technically termed as the first depiction of zombies walking among the living (except these dead aren't the flesh-eating ones), "L'Accuse" shows the soldiers walking to the local village where they judge whether their death was worth their ultimate sacrifice. Hearing about a few scattered profiteers who unscrupulously made large sums of money from the war, these soldiers deliberate on the villagers' fates. Gance noted that out of the 2,000 soldiers in the film returning to the front, 80% became casualties in the last months of the war.

    Film historians claim Gance's "J. Accuse" was 10 years ahead of his time with his unique lighting illustrating the French Impressionistic moods of delving deep into the emotions of the movie's characters, and his use of mobile camera movements. The financial success of the 1919 film allowed the director to produce even more ambitious movies in the future such as 1923's "La Roue" and 1927's "Napoleon." Gance even made an later talking film called "L'Accuse" in 1938, warning on the tensions developing as a prelude to World War Two.
    9planktonrules

    A super-important film to the history of cinema

    Before I start, I am a bit confused. If the newly restored version just debuted this year, how come there are reviews that predate this? Could it be that they saw an extremely abbreviated version? Could it also be that some have reviewed a movie they never actually saw (something that's happened with the first Marx Brothers film and many other lost films). All I know is that this movie was assumed lost until quite recently and you may want to keep this in mind--the reviews were based, at best, on an earlier and less complete version.

    UPDATE: After talking it over with one of the earlier reviewers, I learned that there WERE other extremely truncated versions floating out there on VHS. I am glad this cleared up my confusion and thank goodness we now have the fully restored Flicker Alley version!

    While writer/director Abel Gance made two films called J'ACCUSE, they are both very, very different even though they are about WWI. The 1938 version is much more watchable but dated stylistically for 1938 and the 1919 version is overlong and has a blurred message BUT it also was much more important historically speaking, as for 1919, it was an incredibly innovative film.

    Unlike the 1938 version, a very significant portion of this film is set before WWI--perhaps too much, as it seemed unnecessary and tended to make the film a bit overlong (at nearly three hours). However, the battle scenes were very good and until THE BIG PARADE and ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT, they were probably the best on film. Also, since it was made mostly in 1918, there is no post-war section to the film--the war had literally just ended. The 1938 film is MOSTLY set in the intervening years--including 1938.

    The overall message is that war is bad and pointless, which is the same messages as the later film, but since it was mostly filmed DURING the war, there also seemed to be a much stronger anti-German bias. In other words, while war was seen as evil, so were the raping and murdering Germans. It's natural that in the midst of the war that it be portrayed that way, but it's a shame this anti-German bias was in this film and not the 1938 one (since, in WWII, the Germans were actually "the bad guy"--in WWI the German people and soldiers were victims just like everyone else). So the film suffers from the "blame it all on the Germans" myth.

    As I mentioned above, there were multiple messages in the film. Another important plot in the film involves friendship and love--and in that sense it is a much more conventional story. Personally, I felt this aspect of the film was the least important.

    Overall, a spectacular and seminal work--though one that isn't as spectacular today since better war and anti-war films have followed. The biggest problems are the stagy style, too much melodrama and its length--but when the film debuted in 1919, it was STILL much better and more watchable than most films coming out in Europe and America.
    9TheLittleSongbird

    Accused

    Abel Gance in my mind was a pioneer of not just French cinema but cinema in general. All of his work is well worth the look and are visual and technical marvels, some of the techniques being one he pioneered. Some of his best works, 'Napoleon' being one of them, are revolutionary in not just silent film but also film of all kinds and are towering achievements. Is his work for all tastes? Not all, tending to be very long and sprawling with a lot of patience required.

    'J'Accuse', released at a time where the First World War had just ended and where feelings were raw, is another great, near-masterwork, work of his. Not quite the towering achievement that is 'Napoleon' for example, but there is more than enough to show off what made him so great and important. Whether one likes it may be dependent on their opinion on war films, personally appreciate them a lot and while not one of my favourite war films (i.e. 'All Quiet on the Western Front') it is a genre milestone and important. It is still incredibly haunting and moving.

    Maybe it does run a little too long, but overall 'J'Accuse's' emotional power and technical brilliance cannot be denied.

    Visually, 'J'Accuse' looks amazing. Not just for back then, but also then. The editing is not as "unlike anything seen before" quality like the innovative editing in 'Napoleon' was, but it is still very fluid and the transitioning is practically seamless throughout. The sets are also beautiful to look at. The standout visually and technically though is the magnificent cinematography, very audacious with some very interesting and beautifully composed techniques. Also with some beautifully poetic shots in the more emotional moments. The music is haunting and fits well, not over-bearing or over-dramatic or sentimentalised.

    Gance's direction is near-triumphant and superbly controlled. The story is still hard hitting and poignant and the message still resonates without preaching or being muddled. The war scenes are bold, wrench the gut and brought a lump to the throat and the long final scene is unforgettable in its eeriness and emotion. The acting is very good, not static or theatrical, while the characters were ones worth connecting with.

    Overall, excellent. 9/10.
    10peterportez-1

    Who Are the Naysayers?

    I wish that we could read a comment from at least one of the 91 persons who gave a "1" rating to this silent film masterpiece. What were these 91 thinking? Do they hate all silents? Did they object to the length? If "J'Accuse!" is a "1," why did they suffer through its almost three-hour duration? If they gave up watching after 10 minutes, why bother to vote and muck up the weighted average, now standing at an absurd 6.4? Thank you, Turner Classic Movies, for making "J'Accuse" available to a wide audience. That network is most capably helping fill the void left by the shutting down of most of America's repertory film theaters.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      The soldiers in the March of the Dead sequence were real soldiers on leave from the front. Most of them were killed within the next few weeks.
    • Citas

      Child #1: It's war!

      Child #2: What's war?

      Child #1: I don't know.

    • Versiones alternativas
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA Srl: "LE CROCI DI LEGNO (1932) + PER LA PATRIA (J'Accuse, 1919)" (2 Films on a single DVD). The film has been re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Zombie Evolution (2008)

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    • How long is J'accuse!?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 21 de enero de 2020 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Francia
    • Idioma
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • J'accuse!
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Saint-Michel, Haute-Garonne, Francia
    • Productora
      • Pathé Frères
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Total a nivel mundial
      • FRF 3,500,000
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 46 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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