Film Review
It's a sobering thought that Paris, or rather its unrivalled
accumulation of historic monuments, came within an inch of being
obliterated one fateful day in August 1944. Imagine that - the
Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, the Arc de triomphe, the Elysée Palace
and numerous other cultural gems from across the centuries destroyed in
a single day in a final act of defiance from the most evil regime in
history. And that it should fall to one man, General Von
Choltitz, Hitler's man in Paris, to accomplish this staggering act of
cultural barbarism. Had Von Choltitz acted differently, had he
been a little more loyal to his Nazi superiors and less willing to
consider the implications of his actions, Paris as we now know it would
have been wiped from the face of the Earth in the dying days of
WWII. It is scarcely imaginable.
To this day, it is not known just why Von Choltitz, a dedicated senior
officer in the German army, defied a direct order from the Führer
to destroy Paris. In their 1964 book
Paris brûle-t-il? (later made
into a film of the same title by
René Clément),
Dominique Lapierre and Larry Collins posited the view that Von Choltitz
acted out of self-interest, gambling that the Allies would show him
leniency once they had taken the French capital in their push to
liberate France. In his 2011 stage play
Diplomatie, Cyril Gély
offers a more interesting and perhaps more plausible alternative,
suggesting that Von Choltitz was dissuaded from carrying out his orders
by a Swedish consul, Raoul Nordling.
In his film adaptation of Gély's two-handed play, director
Volker Schlöndorff opts for a theatrical approach which retains
the structure of the original play and focuses on the moral and
intellectual contest between the main protagonists, Von Choltitz and
Nordling. The play is set on the evening preceding the planned
destruction of Paris and has the mood and intensity of a game of chess,
in which two skilful players make their moves with cautious
deliberation and cunning. Although Von Choltitz and Nordling did
have several conversations prior to the former's decision to disobey
his orders, the meeting depicted in the film never actually took
place. Critics have been quick to point out this historical
inaccuracy in Gély's play but dramatically it hardly
matters. The two men may not have met physically in the way the
film describes, but who's to say that, as he sat contemplating his
options, Von Choltitz did not conjure up Nordling in his mind so that
he could meditate on the implications of his terrible assignment?
A prominent figure in New German Cinema of the 1960s and 70s, Volker
Schlöndorff is best known for
Die Blechtrommel (a.k.a.
The Tin Drum) (1979), which won him
both the Palme d'Or at Cannes and an Oscar for Best Foreign Language
Film. For anyone familiar with his work,
Diplomatie is an unusually
understated and focussed film - essentially no more than a piece of
filmed theatre spiced up with some archive footage and a few occasional
(mostly superfluous) digressions from the main narrative. The
film's power lies not in its mise-en-scène (which is perhaps too
subservient to Gély's play for its own good) but in the totally
enthralling central performances from André Dussollier and Niels
Arestrup, reprising the roles they had already played to great acclaim
on the French stage.
Dussollier's Nordling is a fascinating character, as devious and
manipulative a diplomat as you can imagine, but ultimately it is
Arestrup's wonderfully ambiguous Von Choltitz who monopolises our
attention and our sympathies. Through a performance of remarkable
quality, Arestrup gives us more than a glimpse of the mental anguish
experienced by his character, a man visibly torn between his duty to
his superiors and his duty to mankind and posterity.
Diplomatie is not only a compelling
piece of drama that offers a sombre reflection on one of the great
"What If" scenarios of the 20th century, it also serves as a pointed
allegory for many of our present day concerns, those where our
immediate needs and aspirations have to be weighed up against those of
future generations. Paris was saved from destruction in 1944 by a
quirk of conscience. How confident are we that our world can be
steered away from a comparable or even greater catastrophe by today's
Nordlings and Von Choltitzs?
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
It is the night of the 24th-25th August 1944. The fate of Paris
is in the hands of one man, General Von Choltitz, who has just received
orders from the Fuhrer to blow up the capital. Descended from a
long line of military Prussians, Von Choltitz has never yet hesitated
when it comes to obeying orders. The bridges over the Seine and
the most important historical monuments - the Louvre, Notre-Dame
Cathedral and the Eiffel Tower - are all mined and ready to be
destroyed. With diplomacy the only arms available to him, the
Swedish consul Nordling must try to persuade Von Choltitz not to carry
out his orders...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.