Während des Ersten Weltkriegs geraten zwei französische Soldaten in Gefangenschaft und kommen in ein deutsches Kriegsgefangenenlager. Nach mehreren Fluchtversuchen werden sie in eine als aus... Alles lesenWährend des Ersten Weltkriegs geraten zwei französische Soldaten in Gefangenschaft und kommen in ein deutsches Kriegsgefangenenlager. Nach mehreren Fluchtversuchen werden sie in eine als ausbruchssicher geltende Festung gebracht, aus der es scheinbar kein Entkommen gibt.Während des Ersten Weltkriegs geraten zwei französische Soldaten in Gefangenschaft und kommen in ein deutsches Kriegsgefangenenlager. Nach mehreren Fluchtversuchen werden sie in eine als ausbruchssicher geltende Festung gebracht, aus der es scheinbar kein Entkommen gibt.
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 6 Gewinne & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Le captaine von Rauffenstein
- (as Eric von Stroheim)
- Cartier - l'acteur
- (as Carette)
- Le serrurier
- (as Peclet)
- L'instituteur
- (as Daste)
- Le lieutenant Demolder
- (as Itkine)
- L'ingénieur
- (as Modot)
- Le lieutenant Rosenthal
- (as Dalio)
- L'officier anglais
- (Nicht genannt)
- Le sénégalais
- (Nicht genannt)
- Un soldat
- (Nicht genannt)
- Un prisonnier
- (Nicht genannt)
- Maison-Neuve
- (Nicht genannt)
- Un officier de la forteresse
- (Nicht genannt)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesJoseph Goebbels made sure that the film's print was one of the first things seized by the Germans when they occupied France. He referred to Jean Renoir as "Cinematic Public Enemy Number 1". For many years it was assumed that the film had been destroyed in an Allied air raid in 1942. However, a German film archivist named Frank Hansel, then a Nazi officer in Paris, had actually smuggled it back to Berlin. Then when the Russians entered Berlin in 1945, the film found its way to an archive in Moscow. When Renoir came to restore his film in the 1960s, he knew nothing of Hansel's acquisition and was working from an old muddy print. Purely by coincidence at the same time, the Russian archive swapped some material with an archive in Toulouse. Included in that exchange was the original negative print. However, because so many prints of the film existed at the time, it would be another 30 years before anyone realised that the version in Toulouse was actually the original negative.
- PatzerAs the WWI German soldiers are celebrating a French fort's capture, the map on the wall of the officers club is clearly an inter-war (1919-1938) map of Germany.
- Zitate
Capt. de Boeldieu: For me it's simple. A golf course is for golf. A tennis court is for tennis. A prison camp is for escaping.
- VerbindungenEdited into Geschichte(n) des Kinos: La monnaie de l'absolu (1999)
This is a French work of art by the great Renoir, who would make his most acclaimed film, RULES OF THE GAME, two years later. If you ask me, GRAND ILLUSION is the superior pic and holds up immeasurably better. The small doses of humor and original characters in this film foresee the classic "shooting party" of RULES OF THE GAME. With this movie, Renoir uses prisoners-of-war and the ludicrous element of war so prevalent in early 20th Century Europe and merges them into a film not unlike a play (an extremely well-written play). The viewer has no illusions as to whether or not a war is happening. We happen not to see any battles or gunplay, rather, the human element between men and women who are not so different no matter their ethnicity.
Renoir's camera is an incredible tool used throughout. He probes the characters at the various prison camps with some smooth dolly shots and brilliant use of focus and pull-backs. It seems like an extension of his hand, much like his father's paintings. One striking scene has some weary soldiers singing the French "Las Marseilles" after getting third hand knowledge of a French victory over their German captors. Any scene with Erich von Stroheim is interesting because he is human and not some mindless German dictator so many people would come to know at the time of the film's release. He is a broken man, scarred by war and looking to gain a friend in the enemy. This is rare.
As far as prison camp films go, these guys seem to have it easy, however the fact that they are officers gives us some explanation. The story-line effectively moves from escape attempts to human realization of the situation they are in. Parts of it reminded me of STALAG 17, Billy Wilder's 1953 classic no doubt inspired by GRAND ILLUSION. This is Wilder's film without the Hollywood touch, realist and sometimes drab. Abel Gance's J'ACCUSE would follow a year later. If you want to see some anti-WWI films with two completely opposite methods of warning beneath the surface, see these two flicks back to back.
The illusion of reality is shattered by war, Renoir is telling us. If only it could be as simple as those amazing shots of the countryside from inside the German woman's house: a breathtaking, simple look at a peaceful scene the way it should be.
RATING: ***1/2
Top-Auswahl
- How long is The Grand Illusion?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Grand Illusion
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 21.840 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 47 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1