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IMDbPro

Week-end à Zuydcoote

  • 1964
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Week-end à Zuydcoote (1964)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
75 Photos
DramaWar

In June 1940, during the Dunkirk evacuation of Allied troops to England, French sergeant Julien Maillat and his men debate whether to evacuate to Britain or stay and fight the German troops ... Read allIn June 1940, during the Dunkirk evacuation of Allied troops to England, French sergeant Julien Maillat and his men debate whether to evacuate to Britain or stay and fight the German troops that are closing-in from all directions.In June 1940, during the Dunkirk evacuation of Allied troops to England, French sergeant Julien Maillat and his men debate whether to evacuate to Britain or stay and fight the German troops that are closing-in from all directions.

  • Director
    • Henri Verneuil
  • Writers
    • Robert Merle
    • François Boyer
  • Stars
    • Jean-Paul Belmondo
    • Catherine Spaak
    • Georges Géret
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henri Verneuil
    • Writers
      • Robert Merle
      • François Boyer
    • Stars
      • Jean-Paul Belmondo
      • Catherine Spaak
      • Georges Géret
    • 14User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 2:11
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos75

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    Top cast45

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    Jean-Paul Belmondo
    Jean-Paul Belmondo
    • Julien Maillat
    Catherine Spaak
    Catherine Spaak
    • Jeanne
    Georges Géret
    Georges Géret
    • Pinot
    Jean-Pierre Marielle
    Jean-Pierre Marielle
    • Pierson
    Pierre Mondy
    Pierre Mondy
    • Dhéry
    Marie Dubois
    Marie Dubois
    • Hélène Atkins
    Christian Barbier
    • Paul
    François Guérin
    • Le lieutenant pressé
    Kenneth Haigh
    Kenneth Haigh
    • Atkins
    Ronald Howard
    Ronald Howard
    • Robinson
    Jean-Paul Roussillon
    Jean-Paul Roussillon
    • La gouape…
    Albert Rémy
    Albert Rémy
    • Virrel
    Nigel Stock
    Nigel Stock
    • Un soldat brûlé
    Pierre Vernier
    Pierre Vernier
    • Un croque-mort…
    Alan Adair
    Michel Barbey
    Michel Barbey
    • Dr. Claude Cirilli
    Robert Bazil
    • Un soldat
    Marie-France Boyer
    Marie-France Boyer
    • Jacqueline
    • Director
      • Henri Verneuil
    • Writers
      • Robert Merle
      • François Boyer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.92.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9GianfrancoSpada

    Weak end in Dunkirk...

    The 1964 film, though today largely unknown outside of specialized circles, stands as a quietly monumental work within the WWII combat subgenre. While it may not reach the lofty heights of general cinematic masterpieces, it undoubtedly earns its place as an iconic entry in war cinema-an essential reference point for those seriously interested in the micro-histories of retreat, disillusionment, and psychological collapse during the Second World War.

    At the helm of this rigorously composed narrative is Henry Verneuil, whose directorial precision orchestrates every element of the film with disciplined clarity. Known also for his work in The Vultures (1967) with Belmondo, The 25th Hour (1967) with Anthony Quinn, and the tragicomedy The Cow and I (La Vache et le Prisonnier, 1959) with Fernandel, Verneuil brings to this project a deep familiarity with WWII as cinematic material. His direction is not flamboyant but exacting: every scene calibrated, every moment weighted, yet never forced. He avoids the self-indulgence of spectacle, opting instead for a control that supports the atmosphere of entropic desperation. What might easily become bombastic under a less restrained hand remains grounded, tense, and narratively honest.

    Much of this effect is achieved through a production design of remarkable ambition and detail. The film's mise-en-scène is rigorous in its materiality. Uniforms are rumpled, gear is missing, firearms often seem useless or ornamental. There's no fetishization of military paraphernalia, and the usual iconography of the war film-the helmet, the rifle, the rucksack-appears worn to the point of farce. This isn't a war fought by professionals but endured by individuals ill-prepared, psychologically and materially, for the collapse of order. The visual texture of decay is pervasive: sand clogging weapons, mud blending into blood, smoke blurring the horizon. The visual field itself becomes unreliable.

    Within this visual disintegration, the scale of the production asserts itself with a kind of functional elegance. This is clearly a large-scale undertaking: a generous deployment of military vehicles, well-managed crowd scenes, elaborate stunt choreography, and frequent, well-timed explosions that never tip into gratuitous excess. The abundance of extras and the convincing replication of chaos serve not as an indulgence in spectacle, but as a reinforcement of thematic disarray. These elements are executed with such balance and control that they become organic to the narrative's internal logic. This is large-scale filmmaking without triumphalism-a vision of wartime collapse rendered with logistical precision.

    Verneuil's orchestration of this notorious chapter-the chaotic withdrawal at Dunkirk and the perilous maneuvers that characterized it-is nothing short of masterful. It's a depiction that refuses to mythologize the moment, and instead captures the exacting disintegration of structure and morale. In doing so, the film distances itself from the celebratory narratives that often attend portrayals of this event, especially in Anglophone cinema. This is not Dunkirk (1958), where adversity ultimately underscores collective endurance. Here, the fragmentation is total, and Verneuil ensures that every stylistic and material choice drives that point home.

    Through a subdued yet uncompromising aesthetic, and a narrative architecture that refuses the comforts of clarity or closure, the film makes its mark not by shouting, but by eroding the very ground beneath its characters. It is in this erosion-meticulously framed, meticulously rendered-that Verneuil's vision finds its most haunting expression. The result is a film that, while never straining to impress, leaves a deep and persistent impression: a work of remarkable craft, rare thematic discipline, and lasting resonance within the canon of WWII cinema.
    3weirdquark

    No drama, no tension, no story, no point.

    It takes real skill to make such an inherently dramatic story so damn boring and utterly drained of all interest and vitality.

    The amazing shooting location, the vintage fighter planes, the explosions, the hundreds or thousands of background extras... all wasted on a film with no story. In place of a story, they give us a random string of random encounters between random people who talk and talk, and then talk some more about nothing. They walk and talk. They sit and talk. They smoke and talk. They drink and talk. And then some bombs go off, or some Messerschmitts fly low and strafe the soldiers. And then we're back to pointless talking. This is not a film. It's two hours of footage.

    And it's unfortunately characteristic of a particular kind of French film (especially a 1960s French film) where we get a cast of automatons who don't at all resemble real human characters but go around engaging in inane chit chat or robotically spouting meaningless philosophical musings or dialectics. It's so 60s. It's so French.
    8GrandeMarguerite

    Not exactly a beach party

    It is really amazing that what was one of the biggest popular successes of the 60s in the French cinema has only one review on the IMDb! So here is my little contribution.

    For those who have seen the recent "Atonement", the story will look familiar as the film is about one of the darkest episodes of WWII (i.e. the retreat of British and French troops at Dunkirk in June 1940), an episode evoked perhaps too briefly in the British film. In June 1940, British and French troops fighting against the Germans in Northern France were forced to retreat to the coastal town of Dunkirk and its suburbs. Their only hope of escape was to cross the Channel to England, but the boats were scarce and all the time they were attacked from the air by German fighter planes. This is literally the background for the whole movie. During two hours, we follow a young soldier named Julien Maillat through what was actually a terrible mess. Based on the first novel by Robert Merle, which was awarded the Goncourt Prize (the French equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize), "Week-end à Zuydcoote" is a realistic and grim portrayal of war. Merle himself was trapped on Dunkirk's beaches in 1940, and this brought a touch of authenticity to his work. Besides, when most war films depict glory and victory, this one is about defeat and loss. Therefore, the movie is not about battles between armies of nameless soldiers; it shows instead the boredom, frustration, fear and anger of ordinary human beings - all compressed into a turbulent two day period. That being said, don't expect one of those French "high brow" films! Henri Verneuil was an excellent filmmaker who knew how to make a real blockbuster (as this one proved to be). Although I never regarded him as an original nor even a prominent director, "Week-end à Zuydcoote" is perhaps his best effort. Well served by an excellent cast (leading man Jean-Paul Belmondo in one of his best parts, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Pierre Mondy as a gradually repulsive swindler...), the movie has benefited from Henri Decaë's exceptional cinematography and Maurice Jarre's fine score. Verneuil has managed to construct a believable reconstruction of the episode, which matches some of the best Hollywoodian movies on that period. The weak point (and this prevents me from giving this movie a 10/10) is the story that unfolds around the encounter of Maillat (Belmondo) and a young woman (Catherine Spaak) who resolutely refuses to leave her home in the suburbs of Dunkirk. This part of the movie seems artificial. While Verneuil is very good at depicting the protagonists' experiences, he proves to be clumsy with this segment. In spite of this minor flaw, "Week-end à Zuydcoote" is a thoroughly enjoyable show and a bitter reflection on war.
    7qeasp

    Endless & Aimless Movement

    I found myself distracted by the background of the continual movements of squads of soldiers, aimlessly marching backwards & forwards, in opposite directions, for no obvious reasons & completely oblivious to the presence of the three principal characters.
    Kirpianuscus

    war stories

    It is a film deserving be loved like the novel inspiring it. The motif is more than simple - the cast and the cinematography and the brilliant simplicity , proposing fair reactions , nice dialogues, answers to the challenges, inspired portraits of love and comradery becoming friendship, precise definition of death and a great work of Jean Paul Belmondo.

    Few scenes as the boats to the ships or as the horse toy in wave.

    Very simple, must see it. Because it is more than a war film. It propose, in admirable manner, just simple war stories of ordinary people, out of recipes of heroism.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Filmed at the actual location of one of the operation Dynamo evacuations, on the beaches of Bray-Dunes near Dunkirk.
    • Quotes

      Julien Maillat: Jeanne, I'll wait for you until seven in the caravan.

      Jeanne: How will you wait for me? What does that mean? Julien!

    • Connections
      Featured in Vivement dimanche: Jean-Paul Belmondo 2 (2013)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 18, 1964 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Weekend at Dunkirk
    • Filming locations
      • Bray-Dunes, Nord-Pas-de-Calais-Picardie, France(beach scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Paris Film Productions
      • Interopa Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • FRF 10,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 59m(119 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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