Film Review
Having served a long stint as a reporter in Indochina during the war,
Claude Ogrel was better placed than almost anyone to make a film about
the conflict which ended in humiliating defeat for France in 1954 and
provided the overture for America's equally misguided Vietnam
War. It was a war that was practically a taboo subject in France
at the time and when he completed
Patrouille
de choc, under the name Claude Bernard-Aubert, Ogrel had a rough
time with the government censor. Unimpressed with film's
pessimistic tone, the censor insisted not only on a change of title (it
was originally called
Patrouille
sans espoir) but also the removal of its grim ending showing the
complete annihilation of a French garrison. Since, the film has
been restored to its original form and is consequently one of the
grimmest war films ever made in France.
Whilst it may lack the coherence and dramatic impact of Pierre
Schoendoerffer's more polished
La 317e section (1965), which
offers a similarly realist stance of the Indochina War,
Patrouille de choc is an involving,
eye-opening film that succeeds in evoking the true horror of war.
More importantly, it provides a valuable first-hand account of the
experience of soldiers serving in the Indochina War, most of whom were
barely out of their teens, with many destined to be killed or mutilated
in combat with the doggedly persistent Vietminh.
For the most part, the film resembles a documentary that focuses on the
peaceful co-existence between the soldiers and the local villagers
under their care, and this is what makes the events depicted right at
the end of the film all the more horrific. It is hard to think of
another film that has so brutally nihilistic an ending as this
one. It is like a scene from the Apocalypse, in which every
character we have met in the course of the film is savagely slain,
snuffed out in a frenzied orgy of destruction. With France
embroiled in another disastrous military escapade in Algeria,
Patrouille de choc was just too
inflammatory for the French cinema-going public and so the tragic
ending was curtailed by the censorship office to leave the spectator
with a vestige of hope, even though there was patently none to be had.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
During the Indochina War in the late 1940s, Lieutenant Perrin is in charge
of a small battalion of French troops at a remote outpost in Vietnam.
The soldiers are on the best of terms with the locals and provide them with
both education and essential medical supplies. In return, the grateful
villagers keep an eye out for any sign of a possible attack by the Viet Minh.
For a while, the region enjoys an almost unreal tranquillity. The soldiers
are glad of the peace but boredom soon sets in amid expectations of an impending
assault. When the peace ends, it ends with a brutal suddenness.
One night, the Vietnamese insurrectionists converge on the garrison and launch
a fierce, all-out attack. Such are the scale and ferocity of the onslaught
that Perrin and his men are caught completely off-guard and can only put
up a token resistance. The French soldiers are vastly out-numbered
by their Viet Minh attackers, and the grim outcome is all too certain...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.