L'armée des ombres
- 1969
- Tous publics
- 2h 25min
NOTE IMDb
8,1/10
27 k
MA NOTE
Un récit de combattants de la résistance dans la France occupée par les nazis.Un récit de combattants de la résistance dans la France occupée par les nazis.Un récit de combattants de la résistance dans la France occupée par les nazis.
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires et 1 nomination au total
‘Snow White’ Stars Test Their Wits
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesCinematographer Pierre Lhomme claimed that the last surviving, watchable print of the movie had turned completely pink with age. He later supervised the 2k resolution, digital restoration of the film at the Eclair Laboratories in Paris.
- GaffesIn the London WWII sequence, double yellow lines are visible on the road. These were only introduced in the UK in 1956 and didn't become common until the 1960s; a few of the street signs have a style not known before the 1960s.
- Citations
Philippe Gerbier: See you, Comrade.
Legrain: You a communist?
Philippe Gerbier: No. But I do have comrades.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Mémoires pour Simone (1986)
Commentaire à la une
Jean-Pierre Melville's "Army of Shadows" is a sombre film about the French Resistance during WWII. It's yet one more movie that makes me feel like I have a terrible grasp of history, as I knew virtually nothing about the movement before seeing this. Melville himself was a member of the Resistance, so I can only assume that his film is fairly accurate. It's powerful, but not obviously so. It doesn't inspire tremendous reactions or emotions while viewing it, but it gets in your head and stays there.
The film is lacking any of that championing of the underdog spirit that infuses so many other stories about scrappy groups resisting the tyranny of the powerful. The members of the French Resistance in this film live like unearthly beings, skittering from one shadowy doorway to another, trying to erase any sign of themselves. The movie suggests that this need for non-existence bleeds into their psychology as well -- the film's main character becomes nearly inhuman in his devotion to the cause and his ability to ruthlessly do away with colleagues when there's a chance that one of them might jeopardize the others. He's not inhuman, but he must do inhuman things, because the desperation of his and his comrades' situations calls for it.
The Criterion Collection's print of the film looks terrific, or at least as terrific as the film's dreary pallet of grey and brown will allow. Melville gives the film an authentic look -- only some scenes set in the London blitz and on an aircraft carrier have a studio set look to them.
A shot of the Arc di Triomphe both opens and closes the film: a symbol of the France that would eventually emerge from the dark days of WWII, or an ironic jab at a country that can't take much credit for fighting off the tyranny of fascism?
Grade: A
The film is lacking any of that championing of the underdog spirit that infuses so many other stories about scrappy groups resisting the tyranny of the powerful. The members of the French Resistance in this film live like unearthly beings, skittering from one shadowy doorway to another, trying to erase any sign of themselves. The movie suggests that this need for non-existence bleeds into their psychology as well -- the film's main character becomes nearly inhuman in his devotion to the cause and his ability to ruthlessly do away with colleagues when there's a chance that one of them might jeopardize the others. He's not inhuman, but he must do inhuman things, because the desperation of his and his comrades' situations calls for it.
The Criterion Collection's print of the film looks terrific, or at least as terrific as the film's dreary pallet of grey and brown will allow. Melville gives the film an authentic look -- only some scenes set in the London blitz and on an aircraft carrier have a studio set look to them.
A shot of the Arc di Triomphe both opens and closes the film: a symbol of the France that would eventually emerge from the dark days of WWII, or an ironic jab at a country that can't take much credit for fighting off the tyranny of fascism?
Grade: A
- evanston_dad
- 2 avr. 2008
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Army of Shadows
- Lieux de tournage
- Bunker de l'armée, Saint-Cyr-l'Ecole, Yvelines, France(execution by the Gestapo)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 861 983 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 12 620 $US
- 30 avr. 2006
- Montant brut mondial
- 931 732 $US
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