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L'authentique procès de Carl-Emmanuel Jung ()


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A fictional war criminal is put on trial.

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Cast

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Maurice Poullenot ...
Carl-Emmanuel Jung
Ellen Bernsen ...
Le neuvième témoin
Raymond Jourdan ...
Le troisième juge
Gerard Vaudran ...
Un journaliste
...
Un avocat
Jane Le Gall ...
Madame Jung - la femme de l'accusé
Suzy Marquis ...
Le quatrième témoin
Jean-Marie Serreau ...
Le premier juge
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
André Accart ...
Le greffier
Marcel Bisiaux ...
L'assesseur
Liza Braconnier ...
La fille de Jung
Jean-Claude Charnay ...
Un traducteur
Jean d'Yvoire ...
Un témoin
Robert Delanne ...
Un témoin
Jacques Delmare ...
Un avocat
César Gattegno ...
Un témoin
Raymond Gerbal ...
Un témoin
Katia Kolowski ...
Une traductrice
Jean-François Laley ...
Un témoin
Georges Montant ...
Le deuxième juge
Marianne Pade ...
Une traductrice
Henri Pialat ...
Un témoin
Vincent Roques ...
Le fils de Jung
Michel Shilo ...
L'avocat de la défense (as Michel Chilo)
Robert Valey ...
Le procureur
...
Un témoin

Directed by

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Marcel Hanoun

Written by

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Marcel Hanoun ... ()

Produced by

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Marcel Hanoun ... producer

Cinematography by

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Georges Strouvé

Editing by

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Denise de Casabianca

Set Decoration by

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Mireille Bouillé ... (as Mireille Bouille)

Sound Department

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Michel Fano ... sound engineer

Production Companies

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Special Effects

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

"This trial is imaginary", these are the first words of the narrator, who continues by pointing to the figures, prosecutor, lawyers, journalist, faces on an abstract black background, concluding: "For lack of having been able to attend a trial of this kind, I imprison myself, and I let my imagination run wild." Hanoun immediately announces the project for this a-naturalist film, financed by Godard, in which Eustache makes an appearance. He establishes his own relationship to the truth, in a dialectic of known and seen. The trial of Carl-Emmanuel Jung, a Nazi war criminal, turns out to be that of a certain cinema. Based on historical accounts, it reverses the uses of testimony (voice shifts, always off, from one speaker to another) like the expectations of proof by image (refusal to show the announced visual proofs). A political film rooted in the present, it overlaps spaces on top of each other, from the courtroom to the outside, in a deceptive mode for the drive s copy of the voyeur spectator, giving pride of place to listening. Echoing Arendt's analyses, the bet, far from spectacular and from the usual dramaturgy of the courtroom exhibited in the cinema, is that of these "atonal words, without passion, to tell the immeasurable horror of the Nazi crime ."" Written by Nicolas Feodoroff, FID Marseille 2011

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Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • The Authentic Trial of Carl Emmanuel Jung (World-wide, English title)
Runtime
  • 62 min
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Did You Know?

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Trivia Liza Braconnier's debut. See more »

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