| Index | 8 reviews in total |
23 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
The Country is in Danger!, 18 September 2004
Author:
Dr. Barry Worthington (shrbw) from dundee
This film, despite being directed by Renoir, is largely forgotten
today. This is a pity, as there are few films actually about the French
Revolution (though it is used as a backdrop for a variety of plot
lines), and none that really deal with the birth of the Republic.
It was made at the tail end of the 'Popular Front' government, a
coalition of parties (including the communists) formed to protect the
Third Republic from right-wing domestic subversion and the baleful
influence of the Nazis.
It chose to use the early years of the revolution as a metaphor for
this political situation - France was still a (constitutional)
monarchy, and the King possessed the power of a constitutional veto.
The Queen and her circle were said to be plotting a counter revolution.
Within this context, each city and region of France is requested to
send a Battalion to Paris, to defend the government against its
domestic enemies. We follow the adventures of some of the ordinary men
in the battalion from Marseilles (who sing a new song called the
"Marseilles" as they march. We see their experiences in Paris
(including a love interest), and their simple and honest defence of
what they believe in. Finally, they participate in the coup that leads
to the establishment of the Republic and the arrest of the King.
The film is episodic, and some of the scenes are a little melodramatic.
But the characterisation is excellent. The King and his court are not
one-dimensional villains. The scene of his departure is quite moving.
In short, a film well worth rescuing from obscurity.
9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Aristocrats aren't the only ones with stories to tell!, 1 August 2007
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Author:
Cornelie from United States
Aside from being a brilliant film, at different times humorous and
moving, LA MARSEILLAISE is hands down the most accurate film out there
when it comes to the French Revolution.
Some have noted it's "one-sided" aspect, but allow me to make an
observation: when royalists want to make a one-sided film on the French
Revolution, they... make stuff up! Usually utter bilge, such as THE
SCARLET PIMPERNEL or A TALE OF TWO CITIES, films (and original books)
whose only basis in historical fact can be summed up as, yes, there was
a revolution in France in 1789, and yes indeed, Britain and France are
on opposite sides of the Channel. Those who support the republic, on
the other hand, have typically had the scruples to actually *do their
research* before setting out to mold the public's impressions of so
momentous an historical event. Such is the case with LA MARSEILLAISE,
where a large percentage of the dialog is taken from historical
records. (In fact, the only real complaint one could have as far as
historical accuracy goes is costuming, but I've yet to see any film
from that era--1938, in this case--that had accurate costumes.)
All this is not to suggest that LA MARSEILLAISE is dull. Far from it!
As mentioned before, LA MARSEILLAISE is witty and often poignant. In
showing the Revolution from the point of view of ordinary citizens
instead of aristocrats or well-known revolutionary leaders, the film
shows to what point common citizens were dedicated to the ideals of the
Revolution, as well as showing a human side to the "mob" so frequently
portrayed.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Summary of La Marseillaise, 7 August 2005
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Author:
HistoryDTE from United States
Jean Renoir's classic tribute to the glory of the French Revolution, the film captures the personal flavor of the struggle and the philosophical background to the revolutionary upheaval. In a rapid series of vignettes we are introduced to the elegance and nobility of the court of Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette... the contrasting plight of French peasants governed by laws they cannot understand...the storming of the Bastille in 1789 by an undisciplined mob...the plotting of France's exiled nobility to return to power...the Republican march on Paris...and the capture of the Tuilleries in 1793, ending the revolution. The film follows the adventures of two young patriots who join the Peoples' army in Marseilles. As their battalion begins its long journey north to Paris to join with the Federate army, they adopt as their anthem a song from the Army of the Rhine. This song was soon to be known all over France as "La Marseillaise" and would lead the newly unified nation to victory.
7 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
A people's epic, 27 May 2007
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Author:
TrevorAclea from London, England
Jean Renoir's 1938 La Marseillaise is a people's epic, and not just
because it was initially backed by public subscription before budget
overruns necessitated a more conventional form of funding. Even its
credits proudly boast its association with France's short-lived Popular
Front, while the picture is as much a celebration of the everyman's
role in the great events of history as it is rabble-rousing propaganda
for the impending war with Germany. Unfortunately it gets off to a
surprisingly bad start. Indeed, the first twenty minutes are so poor
you wonder if the film can ever recover. A stilted historical pageant
in the very worst sense, with awkward editing, speech-making, initially
clumsy characterisation and a crude jumps forward in time, it's
unpromising stuff.
It's only with the taking of the fort that Renoir really finds his feet
as one character notes that sunsets are only glorious in novels
anyone who has to get up that early for work knows that they're usually
cold, damp and grey. And with that comes Renoir's real manifesto for
the film: he's less interested in the confused politics of France's
messy revolution than he is in the people caught up in it, and from
this point on it becomes a celebration of the ordinary people whose
names have been forgotten in the great events. Aside from the King (a
fine turn from Pierre Renoir, the director's brother) and his court, we
never see any of the great names of the Revolution. Renoir's constantly
roving camera is just as likely to settle on a pair of children playing
in the street than the thousands of extras around them waiting for
battle to be joined, while the political satire of a shadow play is far
less important to him than a soldier taking his girl out for a night at
the pictures. Even the royalists are allowed some intelligence and a
genuine love of France, even if they are fatally undermined by the ease
with which they are sidetracked from politics to trivia: after all,
everybody has their reasons.
It's not a great film, but it is a surprisingly entertaining one once
it gets going and the camera-work is often stunning, with Renoir
demonstrating such a mastery of the epic form that it's a pity he never
returned to the genre.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
One of the Best Movies on the French Revolution, 4 September 2010
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Author:
Jay Raskin from Orlando, United States
Given the monumental importance of the French Revolution in history, it
is surprising that so few films have been made about it or have even
used it as a setting. "The Assassination of the Jean Paul Marat" is
probably the most interesting and offbeat film, but it takes place 20
years after the revolution and only debates and argues about it.
"Scarlet Pimpernel," "Reign of Terror," and "Tale of Two Cities" just
use the revolution as backdrops to tell fun adventure stories. "Danton"
is boring, anti-revolutionary and childish, everyone is presented in
black and white terms. Griffith's "Orphans of the Storm" has lots of
delights and some great action sequences, but is too didactic and
anti-revolutionary. "Marie Antonette" (2006) and "Affair of the
Necklace" are beautiful and great works, but show little interest in
the revolution itself.
Although it deals with only some events leading to the overthrow of the
monarchy, "La Marseillaise" is possibly the best film. It shows the
complexity of the events and deals with them in an intelligent and
reasonable manner. It shows how "the Brunswick Manifesto" led to the
arrest of the King and Queen. While Marie and Louis, are not shown in a
particularly good light, neither are they caricatured.
The movie is episodic and slow, but there are a number of dazzling
shots and scenes. The attack on the King's palace at the end is the
dramatic highlight.
There is a fabulous scene in the middle of the film where the
aristocrats are singing a song about how they are going to "hang the
traitors" and shortly the revolutionaries answer by singing about how
they are going to "hang the aristocrats." It shows the most humanistic,
balanced and honest presentation of the situation of any film on the
subject that I have seen.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A grand moment in French history, beautifully told with the seeds of Renoir's greatness showing, 19 November 2007
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Author:
OldAle1 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Coming as it does between the much better-known and acclaimed La Grande
illusion and La Bête humaine, it's not surprising that this epic story
of the French Revolution told mostly from the point of view of several
peasant and laboring-class men who find themselves (mostly uneasily)
caught up in the events of the early part of the revolt would get
glossed over by many film historians. And it's not quite on the level
of those masterpieces nor of La Règle du jeu from the following year or
for that matter most of Renoir's 40s and 50s output, but it's also
hardly worthy of dismissal.
The film begins in the countryside and the Mediterranean port city of
Marseilles, as a middle-aged man is about to be tried (and presumably
executed) for the killing of a pigeon on his lord's land. He instead
escapes into the country, into the mountains, where he meets up with
with other like-minded impoverished proto-rebels. Slowly over the
course of the first half-hour the struggle takes on political tones
rather than just the personal gripe of one man, and it is the genius of
the film to keep slowly building to the inevitable climax of "The
Nation" versus "The King" while never forgetting to regard participants
also as individuals.
By the middle of the film the royal family and nobles have begun to
understand the dangers they face, or at least some have -- the king
still ignores the growing strife -- and they begin to play a major role
in the film. Interestingly, the prime revolutionaries themselves though
mentioned never take the stage; the focus is always on the lowest and
the highest members of society, with the intellectuals who fomented the
events offstage. Renoir is, it seems, trying to tell us that events
were inevitable, and the prime movers really aren't all that
significant if we look at the lives of those who stood most to gain, or
lose.
The final battle sequences are impressively staged, the film as a whole
is strikingly well-acted and pretty seamless for all its shifting of
focus between the oblivious king and his progressively angrier
subjects. Particular acting honors would go to Edmond Ardisson as
Bomier, whose growing beginnings of an understanding that revolution is
not merely about him, but about the whole world around him are very
moving. Pierre Renoir as Louis XVI manages to be foolish, brutal, and
sympathetic by turns.
The Impossibility of Revolution, 4 April 2011
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Author:
tieman64 from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes
through continuous struggle." - Martin Luther King Jr
Like much of director Jean Renoir's work during this period, "La
Marseillaise", which offers a romanticised telling of the French
Revolution of 1789, spends much of its time contrasting the lives of
commoners with those of the aristocracy. Modern audiences will no doubt
find this class baiting tedious, but such angry tracts were common in
the lead up and wake of the second world war (everyone from Renoir to
John Huston to Rossellini to Pasolini to Pontecorvo etc). By the end of
the 70s, cinema's fires of revolution, which Renoir lights here, and
which were subsequently passed on from torch to torch for roughly four
decades, would completely burn out.
The film is divided into five chapters (The Court, The Civil and The
Military Authorities, The Aristocrats, The Marseilles Locals, and The
Ordinary Citizens), but essentially takes the structure of a grand
march from Marseilles to Paris, a battalion of 500 volunteers arriving
in time to capture The Tuileries Palace, leading to the publication of
the Brunswick Manifesto and the overthrowing of Louis XVI's monarchy.
With this march came "La Marseillaise", the song of the peasants, which
later becomes France's national anthem.
Renoir's direction is impeccable, the director adopting a naturalistic,
semi-documentary tone. The film's well-choreographed battles and crowd
scenes are particularly impressive. Today, its marriage of scope and
sensitivity means "La Marseillaise" is still the best film to directly
document the French Revolution. Martin Scorsese calls it "one of the
finest and richest historical films ever made", and would borrow from
it heavily for his stylish but strangely vapid pulp-revolutionary
movie, "Gangs of New York".
Renoir himself considered "La Marseillaise" one of his favourite films.
Fittingly, it was partially sponsored by the Popular Front government
of France (a coalition of leftists in power at the time) and was also
financially backed by the French trade unions and the public.
In terms of flaws, the film fails to get us to actually "care" about
the revolution, has too much speechifying during its first hour (it
eventually becomes quite stirring) and possess a brand of 1930s
melodrama which modern audiences will no doubt turn their noses up to.
Ironically, the most touching scene in the film is of a tortured King
Louis XVI surrendering his power to the National Assembly. Visconti
would be proud.
What dates the film most, though, is the fact that we now firmly live
in post-revolutionary times. Renoir rallies against aristocrats and
their crimes against humanity, he champions for the revolution as a
call to the rights of man, he reminds citizens to always be vigilant in
defending liberty against tyranny, he advocates against both monarchy
and nationalism, he demands that commoners be given an equal voice in
government...bunch such things have a quaint, almost naive tinge
nowadays.
In our era of "diversity", "devolved power", "anticentralizen",
"digitized capitalism", "mobilized local creativity and self
organisation", there is simply no head to strike. Revolution is an art.
It is an art of realising and "seizing the moment". Today, in which
context is near impossible, in which moments and time itself seem
increasingly fleeting, in which "culture" is one of continuous flux (or
rather, the continuous rapid movement of commodities, which creates the
illusion of change, of progress) and perpetual confusion, traditional
revolution, as Renoir sees here, is nigh impossible. This is what
another French director, Robert Bresson, realised with "The Devil,
Possibly", and what Godard spends his career wrestling with.
8/10 Worth one viewing. For Renoir buffs only.
5 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
pleasant historical piece, 24 October 2005
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This film was an opportunity to view the French revolution from the
view of the common people. Most viewers have only seen, perhaps, A TALE
OF TWO CITIES or THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL, so this film does offer fresh
insights. However, to me, some of the dialog and one-sidedness of the
film seemed as one-dimensional as the other two movies I just
mentioned.
The film deals with events from 1789 to 1792 and so it really doesn't
delve into the bloodier years of the Reign of Terror. It is
understandable that these abuses aren't covered in depth, but to omit
the be-headings completely seems rather dishonest. I'd really like to
see a film that gives a balanced view of this period, but have yet to
see it--and that's a shame, as it's a fascinating and tumultuous
period.
FYI--From my point of view as a history teacher, it does seem amazing
that within only two years of the completion of this very rousing and
patriotic film the French capitulated to the Nazis.
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