Film Review
Based on the award winning novel by Robert Merle,
Week-end à Zuydcoote provides
a harrowingly realistic account of one of the darker episodes in World War II - the
retreat and decimation of the English and French troops at Dunkirk in June 1940. Whereas
most war films ultimately conclude in glory and victory, this one is resolutely about
defeat and loss, offering a sober reminder of the grim reality of war.
Week-end à Zuydcoote is one of director Henri Verneuil's most ambitious and daring
films, and should be considered one of his best works.
What makes this film so memorable is that it combines the epic scale of the traditional
blockbuster war film with the intimacy of its protagonists' day-to-day experiences.
The film is not concerned with battles between armies of nameless soldiers; instead, it
shows how ordinary human beings feel about their predicament - depicting their boredom,
frustration, fear and anger - all compressed into a turbulent two day period.
Even though he had only a modest fraction of the resources that would be available to a Hollywood director on
a comparable film, Verneuil manages to achieve an astonishingly believable reconstruction
of the period. It is reported that he scoured most of France to find authentic-looking
equipment for his film and recruited two thousand extras (mainly dockers and workers at
a nearby factory) for the armies of British and French soldiers stranded on the Normandy
beaches.
Henri Decaë's sumptuous colour cinematography gives the film a boldly lyrical quality
which is superbly complemented by Maurice Jarre's dramatic score - both heighten
the audience's involvement in the film and the intensity of the emotional experience.
With its stunning production values and sterling performances from Jean-Paul Belmondo, Catherine Spaak, Jean-Pierre
Marielle and Pierre Mondy,
Week-end à Zuydcoote is unequivocally
one of French cinema's best war films, and one of the few that
still bears comparison with similar realistic offerings from Hollywood.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Henri Verneuil film:
La Bataille de San Sebastian (1968)
Film Synopsis
Early in June 1940, the battle for France is all but lost. Overwhelmed
by the superiority of the German armies, French and English troops are driven
back towards the Normandy coastline. Their only hope of avoiding a
total wipe out is to flee across the channel to England, but there are far
too few boats available to transport them, and those that do make it out
to sea are under constant attack from the air by German fighter planes.
The beaches are strewn with the sad detritus of war, and all around fires
burn as bullets rage, spitting death in all directions. It is the grimmest
scene from the Apocalypse and for decades to come this will be remembered
as one of the sorriest episodes in the war.
One of the casualties of this tragedy is a young soldier named Julien Maillat.
Along with many of his comrades, he is caught in an ever-tightening death
vice in Dunkirk, fighting a battle that appears increasingly hopeless with
ever hour that passes. Suffering and misery is all around him, and
he can only watch helplessly as cargo ships, laden with exhausted and badly
wounded soldiers, go up in flames. Julien is sick of all this but he
goes on fighting, even as his comrades fall about him. His hopes of
escape are revived when he saves a young woman Jeanne from being raped by
two other soldiers. Jeanne and Julien realise at once that they are
made for one another, but will Fate acknowledge as much? This we shall
soon discover, as the bloody weekend at Zuydcoote reaches its grisly climax...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.