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The Statement (2003)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
27 February 2004 (UK) moreTagline:
At the end of World War II, many of those involved in war crimes were prosecuted. Some got away. Until now.Plot:
Tale of a former Nazi executioner who becomes a target of hit men and Police investigators. | add synopsisAwards:
4 wins moreNewsDesk:
(3 articles)
Actor Alan Bates Dies at 69 (From IMDb News. 28 December 2003)
Canadian Filmmakers To Make a 'Statement' Tonight (From Studio Briefing. 12 November 2003)
User Comments:
A Good Adaptation of a Thriller moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Michael Caine | ... | Pierre Brossard | |
| Tilda Swinton | ... | Annemarie Livi | |
| Jeremy Northam | ... | Colonel Roux | |
| Alan Bates | ... | Armand Bertier | |
| Charlotte Rampling | ... | Nicole | |
| John Neville | ... | Old Man | |
| Ciarán Hinds | ... | Pochon | |
| Frank Finlay | ... | Commissaire Vionnet | |
| William Hutt | ... | Le Moyne | |
| Matt Craven | ... | David Manenbaum | |
| Noam Jenkins | ... | Michael Levy | |
| Peter Wight | ... | Inspector Cholet | |
| Malcolm Sinclair | ... | Cardinal of Lyon | |
| Colin Salmon | ... | Father Patrice | |
| David de Keyser | ... | Dom André (as David De Keyser) |
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Additional Details
MPAA:
Rated R for violence.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
Argentina:120 min | USA:120 minAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreCertification:
Australia:M | Argentina:16 | USA:R | UK:12A | Germany:12 | Singapore:PG | Canada:14A (Ontario)MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Alan Bates' final theatrical film appearance. moreGoofs:
Revealing mistakes: As Brossard is about to place the body of the first assassin into the car, he lifts the dead man's arms into the air in order to sit the body up. As he lets go of the arms, they do not immediately drop as they would for a dead man. Instead, they hesitate, then slowly drop to the ground. moreSoundtrack:
Tous les garçons et les filles moreFAQ
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Your comments will be displayed as follows: A good adaptation of Brian Moore's thriller novel, director Norman Jewison's "The Statement" has its ups and downs.
Michael Caine, who has played many English roles as well as being an American abortion providing doctor, now takes on elderly Frenchman Pierre Brossard, once a shining star of the toady Vichy police force without which the Nazis could never have murdered some 77,000 French Jews. A small percentage of the Holocaust toll but not an unimportant one. Among other acts he participated in the roundup and murder of seven Jews. Such an incident was the basis for the novel.
A man who may belong to a Jewish revanchist organization is killed by Brossard before he can shoot the wheezing, cardiac condition-afflicted former right-hand helpmate for the SS. He's been sheltered for forty years by members of the Catholic clergy.
Tilda Swinton is Judge Levy assigned along with Jeremy Northam, a French army colonel, to find and bring Brossard to trial based on a new law reviving prosecutions against those who committed crimes against humanity. Actually, every important actor in this film except for Charlotte Rampling, who has a small role as Brossard's wife, is English. I'm surprised the French actors' union didn't raise a stink.
This is a chase film with Judge Levy and her colonel either warm or hot on the trail of Brossard who goes from monastery to monastery receiving food, money and help. (In France a judge has vast investigative authority and can and does direct inquiries so the director could credibly have Swinton going from city to city. Imagine Judge Judy flitting about in a chopper ferreting out facts.) At times I thought I was watching a travelogue about the abbeys of Gaul.
There are, of course, hints of a dark conspiracy reaching beyond the Church that I won't reveal.
Caine's peripatetic suspect is deeply religious in the formulaic sense that absolution and ritual salve his conscience but in no way mediate his actions. Caine plays a dirtbag to perfection.
Possibly to avoid charges that the film is unfairly anti-Catholic we're told that
1) the Church is vast, has many subordinate bodies, and those at the top just can't know all that is happening (this defense comes from a gentle librarian-Jesuit priest who also happens to be black, the predominant racial group in the French church).
2) responsibility for aiding genocide by clerics was individual so don't trot out any revisionist Hochhuth/Cornwell/Goldenhagen theories arraigning the Church's leadership.
3) we can't forget that the Resistance was largely communist so maybe there's a rational justification for Vichy's supine collaboration and the very real clerical support for the Nazis if not for every French assisted atrocity.
I despise the mindless Francophobic reaction to France's lack of support for U.S. policy on Iraq. But for too long Vichy and its spineless leaders, Petain and Laval, never mentioned in the film, have gotten a bit of a free ride. So I was happy to see Brossard made frightened as his pursuers close in.
Enjoyable, some nice scenery. Not much more except that Michael Caine is always terrific. And so is Tilda Swinton who brings focused intensity to Judge Levy's unyielding crusade for justice, for that it is.
6/10.