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Army of Shadows - Criterion Collection
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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0715515023726
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Criterion Collection
Languages: English (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Original Language), German (Original Language),
Manufacturer: Criterion Collection
MPN: DCC1693D
Number Of Items: 2
Publisher: Criterion Collection
Region Code: 1
Release Date: May 15, 2007
Running Time: 145 minutes
Studio: Criterion Collection
Theatrical Release Date: 1969
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Editorial Review: Jean-Pierre Melvilles masterpiece about the French resistance against the Nazi Occupation went unreleased in the United States for thirty-seven years before its triumphant theatrical release in 2006. Atmospheric, gripping, and finally tragic, Army of Shadows is Melvilles most personal film, featuring veteran actors Lino Ventura and Paul Meurisse, Jean-Pierre Cassel, and the incomparable Simone Signoret as intrepid underground fighters who must face their own brand of honor and shadowy ethical codes. Set wholly in the dark recesses and back alleys of the war, Army of Shadows is a devastating, intimate look at the fight against evil in an already amoral world.
Who would've guessed that the best film of 2006 would be a 37-year-old thriller about the French Resistance during World War II? Hailed as a masterpiece by an overwhelming majority of reputable critics, Jean-Pierre Melville's Army of Shadows wasn't officially released in America until 2006 (hence its appearance on many of that year's top-ten lists), but its reputation as a French classic was already well-established throughout Europe. Fully restored in 2004 and released in the U.S. by Rialto Pictures, it represents the gold standard of films about the French Resistance, based upon Joseph Kessel's 1943 novel and imbued with personal touches by Melville, an Alsatian Jew whose own involvement in the Resistance qualifies Army of Shadows as a semi-autobiographical exercise in somber nostalgia, as indicated by an opening quote echoing Melville's ironic belief that memories of Nazi occupation needn't always be traumatic. Having lived through this history, Melville doesn't treat it lightly; in Army of Shadows, the threat of death hangs over every scene like a shroud. Unfolding with flawless precision, the plot begins in 1942 and focuses on a small, secretive band of Resistance fighters led by Gerbier (Lino Ventura), whose intuitive sense of danger lends additional suspense to the film's dark, atmospheric study of grace under pressure. While working in the classical tradition of the Hollywood films he admired, Melville breaks from convention with lengthy, deliberately paced scenes in which tension builds to a subtle yet almost unbearable intensity. With the possible exception of a brief and wryly humorous scene involving Resistance leader (and future Prime Minister) Gen. Charles de Gaulle, every scene in Army of Shadows supports Melville's predominant themes of solitude and futility. Melville's visually and thematically bleak outlook may prove challenging for some, but Army of Shadows is remarkably beautiful in its own way, and it gains power with each additional viewing through flawless development of memorable characters played by a first-rate cast. Especially memorable is Simone Signoret as Gerbier's boldly pragmatic ally Mathilde, a woman in a war of men, with a tragic vulnerability that ultimately decides her fate. As intellectually stimulating as it is thrilling to experience, Army of Shadows represents the triumphant zenith of Melville's posthumous recognition as a world-class auteur. Thanks to the Criterion Collection, this masterpiece can now be widely appreciated, along with Criterion's previous DVD releases of Melville's earlier classics Bob Le Flambeur, Le Samourai, and Le Cercle Rouge. --Jeff Shannon On the DVDs On disc 1 in this superior two-disc set, the meticulous 2004 restoration of Army of Shadows is presented in a new high-definition digital transfer supervised by cinematographer Pierre Lhomme. The audio commentary by French film historian Ginette Vincendeau is one of Criterion's finest to date; Vincendeau's scholarship is impeccable, her thematic observations are eloquently expressed, and her knowledge of French cinema is impressively thorough, placing Army of Shadows in a rich context of other films about the French Resistance. The supplements on disc 2 maintain Criterion's highest standards of archival research, beginning with "Jean-Pierre Melville: Filmmaker," a four-minute French TV news segment from 1968, in which Melville discusses the production of Army of Shadows. A new 2006 interview with cinematographer Pierre Lhomme (14:00) is accompanied by a restoration demonstration (7:10) and color-tone reference photos used during the restoration process. Also included is an 11-minute interview (also from 2006) with editor Françoise Bonnot. A half-hour segment of the French TV show L'invite du dimanche, from March 1969, features behind-the scenes production footage and fascinating interviews with Melville, the primary cast of Army of Shadows, novelist Joseph Kessell, and French Resistance fighter André Dewavrin (whom Melville recruited to play Colonel Passy in Army of Shadows). "Melville et 'L'Armée Des Ombres'" ("Melville and Army of Shadows) is an excellent half-hour documentary featuring interviews of many of Melville's contemporaries (including director Bertrand Tavernier) sharing insights and anecdotes in an in-depth appreciation of Melville and Army of Shadows. A superb section devoted to the French Resistance includes "Le Journal de la Resistance," a riveting 33-minute documentary filmed in Paris in August 1944 (and narrated by Noel Coward), just as the final French insurrection and pending arrival of U.S. liberation troops were leading to Nazi surrender and massive celebration in the streets of Paris. A five-minute TV interview segment, from 1984, features Simone Signoret paying tribute to Lucie Aubrac, a Resistance fighter (also interviewed) who was a key inspiration for Signoret's character in Army of Shadows. Finally, disc 2 closes with a 23-minute excerpt from a 1973 episode of the French TV show Ouvrez les guillemets, in which several former members of the French Resistance discuss their clandestine activities during the Nazi occupation of France from 1940 to 1944. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - C'est la Guerre
For me, "Army of Shadows" was a great film that, if anything, is under-rated. The subject matter lets us know that there will be intrigue and suspense and it delivers. However, despite the action that does take place in "Army of Shadows", this is not an action film. Instead, it is a drama in 5 acts. Indeed, this film could easily have been brought to the stage (and maybe it already has been). It is the characters, their relationships to each other and their dedication and motivation that is ... Read More
Rating: - 2006 movie of the year
This is a five star film, an absolutely important, necessary film with flawless acting and directing. Fans of Melville will enjoy a movie with his signature precision and history buffs will respect a film so honest in its portrayal. I can't think of a director more fitting to tell its tale. Melville gave credibility, accuracy and respect for those who lived through this terrifying time. This is one unique gem of a movie, a film that I feel blessed to have seen and absolutely deserving of movie ... Read More
Rating: - "Jackasses."
Jean-Pierre Melville's "Army of Shadows" is a brilliant, slow-moving, and crushing cinematic treatise on morals and basic decency in a time where both have become obsolete.
The French Resistance of WWII has long been a subject of historical debate (who really was a Resistance fighter against the Third Reich and who merely claims to have been? why have the numbers inordinately increased since the end of the war?) and rightly so, but Melville doesn't get into the politics of legacy: he ... Read More
Rating: - French Resistance
Melville's dark and sombre attitude towards the French resistance in WW11. Miles away from the Hollywood heroics to instill an atmospheric brooding slow paced but engaging tour de force. Shot in blue/grey mood episotic but mounts in tension. Melville's study features strong acting, spatial styling as the events begin to unfold. Simone Signoret is a stand out among the fine cast.
The superb commentary, academic but accessible insight into Melville, the resistance is well worth a visit.
Rating: - A Must
My poor wife is tired of me watching films about the French Resistance during World War II (or lack there of - Sorrow and the Pity), but I had to see this one. I `snuck watched it' while she was at work. This is an extraordinarily well made and powerful film. True some of the gendre images are a bit stereotyped, giving the resistance a sense of masculinity that the French wished they had - a kind of cinema compensation for having been humiliated by the Nazis. The story is riveting...essentially about how ... Read More
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