Film Review
The terrifying precariousness of life in Nazi-occupied France is given
a particularly sharp edge when viewed from a child's perspective in
this compelling wartime drama, based on Joseph Joffo's autobiographical
novel.
Un sac de billes
is only the third film to be directed by Jacques Doillon and yet
already we feel that we are in the hands of an auteur filmmaker of rare
skill and sensitivity. The turmoil of childhood is a theme that
Doillon would return to again and again in the course of his career,
and few directors handle the subject with the authenticity and delicacy
that he consistently shows throughout his work. Doillon doesn't
just compel us to identify with his child protagonists, he totally
immerses us in their world. It is a viscerally moving experience
he offers us, forcing us to relive that early phase of our lives when
we were at our most vulnerable and fearful.
There have been many commendable films on the Holocaust but Doillon's
Un sac de billes is easily one of
the most stirring, mainly because it shows things from the point of
view of a ten-year-old boy. Totally bereft of sentimentality, the
film offers the most honest and unromantic account of childhood, its
uneven pace and abrupt editing reminding us what a confused and
traumatic period of existence this is. One minute the child
protagonists are ineptly roasting a stolen chicken over an open fire,
the next they are timidly inveigling their way into a brothel.
They appear happily settled in a children's camp, then they are
petrified as German officers grill them and force them to account for
their circumcision. For these two spirited urchins, life is an obstacle
course strewn with deadly traps, and it is only by being the most
convincing of liars that they avoid ending up on a train bound for
Auschwitz. Thanks to its rigorously understated approach and the
astounding naturalism of the two child lead actors, Richard Constantini
and Paul-Eric Shulmann,
Un sac de
billes is a beautifully ironic tribute to the resilience of the human
spirit, and also one of cinema's most captivating portraits of
childhood.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Jacques Doillon film:
La Drôlesse (1979)
Film Synopsis
Paris, 1941. Joseph and Maurice are two boys whose father, a Jew,
owns a barber's shop. Joseph is 10, his brother is 12, and
neither understands why it is a crime to be a Jew. One day,
Joseph swaps the yellow star he is forced to wear for a bag of
marbles. When the police begin rounding up the Jews in their
neighbourhood, Joseph and Maurice are sent by their father to the South
of France, which is not yet under German occupation. The boys'
older brothers have already made the trip but it still proves to be
hazardous and only by exercising their cunning do Joseph and Maurice
reach their destination unharmed. Even after they have made it to
the Free Zone, the struggle to survive is arduous and full of
dangers. It is not long before they are captured by the Germans
and narrowly escape being deported. Joseph finds work with an old
bookseller who turns out to be a staunch collaborator...
© James Travers
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