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J'accuse !

Original title: J'accuse
  • 1938
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
720
YOUR RATING
Victor Francen in J'accuse ! (1938)
DramaHorrorSci-FiWar

A traumatized World War I veteran builds a machine to prevent war. When the government subverts his machine and a second world war seems increasingly inevitable, in desperation the inventor ... Read allA traumatized World War I veteran builds a machine to prevent war. When the government subverts his machine and a second world war seems increasingly inevitable, in desperation the inventor summons the ghosts of the war dead to protest.A traumatized World War I veteran builds a machine to prevent war. When the government subverts his machine and a second world war seems increasingly inevitable, in desperation the inventor summons the ghosts of the war dead to protest.

  • Director
    • Abel Gance
  • Writers
    • Abel Gance
    • Steve Passeur
  • Stars
    • Victor Francen
    • Line Noro
    • Sylvie Gance
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    720
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Abel Gance
    • Writers
      • Abel Gance
      • Steve Passeur
    • Stars
      • Victor Francen
      • Line Noro
      • Sylvie Gance
    • 16User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast33

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    Victor Francen
    Victor Francen
    • Jean Diaz
    Line Noro
    Line Noro
    • Edith
    Sylvie Gance
    • Flo
    • (as Marie Lou)
    Marcel Delaître
    Marcel Delaître
    • François Laurin
    Georges Saillard
    • Le docteur
    Jean-Max
    Jean-Max
    • Henri Chimay
    Renée Devillers
    • Hélène
    Paul Amiot
    • Un ami de Chimay
    Barral
    • Un soldat
    Jean-Louis Barrault
    Jean-Louis Barrault
    Lucien Bataille
    • Un soldat
    Jean Brochard
    Jean Brochard
    • Le soldat Staminal
    Rivers Cadet
    • Un villageois
    Georges Cahuzac
    • Le capitaine Lecouvreur
    Lucien Callamand
    • Le soldat Damaseau
    Jean Chevrier
    Jean Chevrier
    • Le secrétaire de Chimay
    Félix Clément
    • Le soldat Gilles tenant
    Henry Darbray
    • Un soldat
    • Director
      • Abel Gance
    • Writers
      • Abel Gance
      • Steve Passeur
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.0720
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    Featured reviews

    10boland7214

    Masterpiece With Social Relevance

    This film is a masterpiece with extreme social relevance for the human race. Try to rent it if you can find it. It is still relevant even almost 70 years after it was made. It may be hard to find but it is worth it. Enjoy!!!
    10Michael-110

    A stunningly effective anti-war classic.

    J'Accuse surely ranks as one of the most stunningly effective anti-war films ever made. Its early scenes involve a group of French soldiers who are compelled to go out on a hopeless and utterly pointless patrol. The men are instantly slaughtered by the Germans. The next morning, an armistice is declared. The men on patrol were the last to die. Think of the great anti-war films you've seen--like "Paths of Glory" or "All Quiet on the Western Front." In my opinion, Abel Gance's "J'Accuse" ranks with these masterpieces and, in its final scenes, even surpasses them.

    Jean Diaz is the sole survivor of the doomed patrol. Before the men leave the trenches, Diaz swore to his colleagues that their sacrifice would not be in vain--there would be no more wars. Diaz devotes his life to achieving this goal for which he sacrifices everything. Of course, he fails miserably, as the European powers prepare for a new and even more catastrophic war. In the final scenes, Diaz plays his last and best card in scenes that will not be soon forgotten by those who are fortunate enough to see this great film.
    8planktonrules

    very good anti-war film that COULD use a remake

    This film is an anti-war film about a man who served in WWI and sees that further wars are approaching because we never learned the lesson. Despite his rants, people seem to think war is a GOOD option, so the film ends with his unleashing an object lesson everyone won't soon forget.

    Wow, did this film attempt something different! It was a remake of an earlier silent version by the same director. However, despite its STRONG IMPACT and imaginative script and cinematography at the end, the film was far from perfect. My first complaint is the quality of the camera work. While, as I said above, the end is spectacular, a lot of very grainy old vintage WWI film is inter-spliced into the film. It just doesn't look very seamless, as the quality is dramatically worse than the movie itself. It could really use a remastering--using computer technology to clean up and restore the old footage. My second complaint is the length of the film. For once, I actually think the film would have been better if it would have been shortened. The plot in the middle of the film greatly detracted from the emotional impact of the beginning and the end. Third, while the director was very sincere and was right that WWI was a pointless and stupid waste of life where no one person was truly to blame, his message of moral relativism probably contributed to the French ethos that led to their quick capitulation to the Nazis in WWII. World War II was NOT morally equivalent, as Hitler was indeed evil and the cost in human life to stop him EARLY in the war would have been well-worth it in the end (i.e., taking a pacifist stand allowed Hitler to do FAR more damage to mankind than standing up against him in 1939-40). I admire the effort, but wonder what would have been the result if this film had NOT come out just before WWII.

    Do not assume I am gung-ho about war. Most wars are pointless and WWI is the greatest example of the stupidity and waste of war. For an even better film about this, try watching the original ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT (1930). Another excellent anti-war film is THE EAGLE AND THE HAWK, also set in WWI.

    4/28/08--By the way, I just saw the "original" version of this film by the same writer/director. Despite BOTH having the same name, the films are very different. While J'ACCUSE (1919) is more of a spectacle and was more innovative for the time, J'ACCUSE (1938) is much more watchable today and has a much clearer anti-war message. Also, there is a movie by the same name from 2003 and a mini-series from the 1990s--but both have nothing to do with the French films.
    10dbdumonteil

    Abel Gance is a titan.

    Titan is the right word for a director who is the French equivalent of a David Wark Griffith.He borrowed from Zola his famous sentence "I accuse!" which comes from the Dreyfuss affair.(people should try to see William Dieterle's "life of Emile Zola" which focuses on it).

    "J'accuse" is one of the most convincing and impressive pacifist film of the whole history of the seven art.I'm sure its first half-hour influenced Kubrik's "paths for glory".There are three versions of it:the 1919 one,now forever lost,the 1922 one,with a new and watered-down ending,because of the military censors.Then the 1938 one,which is,to my mind ,the best.The historical context was so threatening that Gance's movie seemed like a cry of terror.IT was terribly different of what was going on in the French cinema at the time :Marcel Carné used to hide his fears behind metaphors for instance

    The first half-hour depicts life in the trenches.Some lines are as provoking as you can imagine.A soldier:"soon there won't be enough trees to make crosses".A little girl:"I want my dad to bring me back a gun to kill the war".The armistice may come quick in the movie,but you must remember that Gance had a message to send to the world.

    Armistice scenes are astounding:a bugle call resounds while the camera shows a dying soldier.The crowds rejoice as the soldiers salute the dead in voices chocked by emotion.The aftermath of war as filmed by Gance had certainly a strong influence on later movies.

    The essential of the movie takes place 20 years later .A survivor,played by Victor Francen,had sworn his soldiers pals who died there would not be another war.Then he begins his incredible task.I want to insist on that:Victor Francen is so good,so sublime,that you must see this movie in French,with English subtitles.Dubbed in English,Francen 's tour de force would lose most of its strength.You should hear him screaming "J'accuse! J' accuse!" People around him thinks he's gone nuts.One breath-taking scene shows him breaking everything in sight.A sublime shot:he's just brought under control, then a gun hanging on a wall comes down and fall.

    For the last part of his movie,Gance outdoes himself;using horror movie codes,stupefying(for the time) special effects, Francen's extraordinary tragedian skills,and an editing to rival David Wark Griffith's "intolerance",he leads us to believe the unbelievable.The Dead awakening will haunt you long after you've seen the movie.The use of the Verdun memorial and its tower make me think of movies that were yet to come!("2001" and its monolith,for instance)

    French movies had never been better than in the thirties.I wish I could find a mathematical formula to prove it.
    8richardchatten

    Dead Men Walking

    Not strictly a remake of Abel Gance's silent classic because that comprised only the first half of this version which is plainly the work of a sadder, wiser man and continues well past the Armistice to deal with the trauma of those who survived.

    Gance shows a command of sound and dialogue well beyond his more celebrated silents, and if like all Gances it goes on too long, it makes up in visual punch what it lacks in brevity.

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    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
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    Frères d'armes (2001)
    War

    Storyline

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    • Trivia
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Connections
      Featured in Universal Horror (1998)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 22, 1938 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • I Accuse
    • Filming locations
      • Studios GFFA, Paris, France(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Forrester-Parant Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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