6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- A fine intimate portrayal of controversial historical events, 3 October 1999
Author:
(xaviermartin@hotmail.com)
First-rate acting and smooth direction make this personal recounting of
controversial Resistance events well worth seeing. As with all films by
Claude Berri, the storytelling is direct and the cinematography is both
poignant and sensitive. Daniel Auteuil is great as usual. Carole Bouquet
also contributes, albeit with less emotional range. The movie focuses as
much on the love between Lucie and Raymond Aubrac as on the historical
events surrounding them as they participate in the French Resistance to
German occupation during World War II. The movie also contains powerful
action scenes of escape and guerilla fighting (which the Germans
considered
terrorism at the time). Watch for a striking scene where Heino Ferch (as
Klaus Barbie) tortures Auteuil (as Lucie's husband Raymond) to obtain
information about Resistance leader "Max". Not only is this scene
memorably
acted and filmed, but it bears on a most controversial event in the
history
of the Resistance. The script follows a book by Lucie Aubrac that is
ostensibly autobiographic. To this day, historians debate whether the
Aubracs remained committed to the resistance or whether Raymond actually
cracked under torture and betrayed resistance mastermind Jean Moulin
("Max"). Moulin was arrested soon after Raymond left prison and died a
hero,
refusing to speak under the torture of Klaus Barbie, the "Butcher of
Lyons".
These events and Barbie's much later in persona trial (1987) still rattle
many people's understanding of the morals and history of France in the
last
sixty-plus years.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Was average, could have been great!, 26 March 2003
Author:
donalohanlon from Ireland
Claude Berri began filming this movie in 1996 with Daniel Auteuil
and Juliette Binoche. Berri and the headstrong Binoche came to
(creative) blows over script changes. He wanted to make it more of
a love story, she wanted it to remain more factual and so in a move
unheard of in French cinema he fired his leading actress, who
also happened to be the biggest French star in the world. A few
monthe later she won an Oscar for The English Patient and berri
recast his movie with Carole Bouquet in the lead.
Bouquet is a talented actress, but not in the same league as the
extremely gifted Binoche. Auteuil as usual gives a fine
performance, but the whole excersise seems leaden down by
romanticism.
Binoche and Auteuil went on to star together in Leconte's
altogether better La Veuve de Saint-Pierre
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- great movie, 16 May 2001
Author:
maxwellsham
I love french movies what can I say. This one is really good as well.
Interesting story I'd never really thought about. I was worried it would be
old and bad you know like many period films are but this one is pretty well
done. The acting is up to scratch and especially moments when the captives
are in the prison and they really are feeling the pain and torture and
still
managing to resist the urge to stop it. Very few weaknesses as well. Lucie
is really beautiful as well a pleasure to watch. Very desparate film which
is well resolved. Overall worth a watch. I gave it 8.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- La Resistance, 6 February 2006
Author:
B24 from Arizona
Engaging story and performances involving members of the French
resistance during World War II. Although I have not yet read the
account on which it is based, I have no reason to believe the film
takes too many liberties with the truth. The locations and sets seem
very authentic, and the dialogue is evocative of the way people spoke
at the time. Something exceptional is presented by way of action
sequences, in fact, where attempts at re-enacting simple events on film
often fail; namely, the interdiction of a convoy carrying prisoners and
a particularly realistic execution scene. High marks are due the
production crew for this one. The overall history of the French
resistance is an extremely complicated tale to be retold for purposes
of explaining just how this story resonates. Young viewers need to
educate themselves in that history in order to appreciate fully this
film's merits.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Excellent, 1 February 1999
Author:
Jonno-4 from Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, UK
This film is an excellent tribute to the bravery of the men and women of the
French Resistance during the Second World War. The film revolves around
Lucie and her attempts to rescue her husband, after he is arrested by the
Gestapo at a Resistance meeting. This film is indeed a testimony to Lucie
and Raymond's relationship, but in my mind, the film serves equally as an
insight into France during the occupation and the political state at the
time. An excellent film.
- Jonno
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- 'Ave A Butcher's At This Great Barbie Doll, 19 January 2004
Author:
writers_reign
It's always problematical when a given actor/actress is replaced during
filming for whatever reason. Personally I thought Ray Walston was fantastic
in 'Kiss Me, Stupid' and can't visualize Peter Sellars even equalling
Walston's performance, let alone eclipsing it. So it is here. One
commentator bizarrely described Juliet Binoche as the best actress in
France. I have every admiration for Binoche and see as many of her films as
possible but has the commentator in question never heard of Isabelle
Huppert, Nathalie Baye, Suzanne Flon, Sandrine Kiberlain, Manu Beart, etc.
Nevertheless this is still a great movie and I for one cannot imagine anyone
other than Carole Bouquet as the eponymous heroine. Were this fiction it
may be thought a tad over the romantic top to have two lovers celebrate the
date they first made love and take a vow to be together on that particular
anniversary for as long as they live, but, as we know, this is a True story
and BOTH lovers, Auteuil and Bouquet make it believable. There is a certain
symmetry here too if anybody asks you. Having established under the credits
an active Resistance group in which Auteuil (as Francois Samuel, 'Aubrac'
was the Resistance name of the husband and wife team)is prominent we then
see him at home in a tender scene with his wife (Bouquet) which establishes
the secondary (or primary, depending on your point of view) theme of
enduring love, and then, to put things in perspective, we see Lucie in her
day job of schoolteacher, spelling out to les enfants the value of history
as a learning tool and reminding them that even as they speak they are
themselves living history.
We are then into a somewhat conventional Resistance story. Brave freedom
fighters captured and tortured, one woman's love overcoming the might of the
occupying forces. It is interesting that Berri has opted to show Lyon as a
sun-filled city - perhaps a hangover from his Jean de Florette/Manon des
Sources gig a dozen years earlier - and this not only makes a contrast from
the usual bleak, overcast, settings of other Resistance movies, but also
points up the horror/barbarism occurring behind closed shutters while the
sun pours down on France's Second City. Of course any film on the Resistance
has to compete with 'L'Armee des Ombres' and, to a lesser extent, 'Laissez
Passer' and if Lucie doesn't quite make it she makes a very creditable and
honorable attempt.
8/10
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- An interesting piece of history, 13 May 2007
Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This is a rather small and quiet WWII film. While the film excels at
its realistic portrayal of the French Resistance, it is a film that
would be "box office poison" in America because its commercial
marketability is pretty limited. This is NOT a film that teens or many
prospective viewers would rush to the theaters to see! There are few
explosions and the nudity isn't the least bit gratuitous. Because of
this, it would only have been made abroad or by an independent film
maker and so it wasn't surprising that this film was shown on the
Sundance Channel.
The story purports to be about a real couple who worked for the
resistance movement. When the husband (Daniel Auteuil) is taken by the
Nazis, his devoted wife (Carole Bouquet) tries desperately to free him.
Both actors are pretty recognizable to American audiences, as Auteuil
has appeared in tons of films--playing a sort of "everyman" character
and Bouquet played the female lead in one of the Bond films (FOR YOUR
EYES ONLY), though she's done plenty of films as well. For a 40
year-old lady, Bouquet is amazingly beautiful and sensuous--way to go,
girl! The action is very low-key but tense and the film is a very
enjoyable history lesson designed for an adult and discriminating
audience.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- A good effort but too esoteric for the public at large, 6 January 2002
Author:
George Parker from Orange County, CA USA
"Lucie Aubrac" tells a slightly tweaked version of the true story of one
woman's heroic struggle as a member of the underground Resistance in WWII
occupied France. Though artistically and technically excellent, many will
find this story only marginally interesting as it lacks the usual
suspense,
action, and other excesses which the public, especially the young
theater-going audiences, expect of such films. Nonetheless, just watching
two fine French actors (Bouquet & Auteuil) at work telling a story not oft
told in film will be sufficient for many, especially those into Europics
who
don't mind subtitles.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- A Beautiful Romance in the Second World War, 31 August 2003
Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Lucy Aubrac (Carole Bouquet) is a woman in love with her husband Raymond
(Daniel Auteuil). He is an important member of the French resistance and
arrested with his friends in a meeting after being betrayed. Lucy will try
to rescue him from the Gestapo prison using all the possible ways. A
beautiful romance in the Second World War, based on a true story. A
correct
direction and good performances of the cast make this movie a worthwhile
entertainment. My vote is seven.
And we'll come from the shadow...., 15 March 2009
Author:
dbdumonteil
A prominent figure of the FRench resistance,Lucie Aubrac was very
popular in France.Till her death ,she visited the junior high
schools,explaining those dark years to the pupils,answering their
questions .She even wrote a small book "La Resistance Expliquée A Mes
Enfants" the relevance of which was obvious:she pointed out the
important role of women in the Resistance when she wrote :"it's
sometimes more dangerous to visit prisoners or to carry documents on
your rack than to blow up a train." Carole Bouquet and Daniel Auteuil
did a good job ,but Claude Berri didn't really.His movie is MTV quality
and it boils down to a woman trying to save her husband and it passes
over in silence the stakes in Resistance.We do not really learn
anything.Take Melville's "L'Armée Des Ombres"(1969) instead.
Own the rights?
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6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
A fine intimate portrayal of controversial historical events, 3 October 1999
Author: (xaviermartin@hotmail.com)
First-rate acting and smooth direction make this personal recounting of controversial Resistance events well worth seeing. As with all films by Claude Berri, the storytelling is direct and the cinematography is both poignant and sensitive. Daniel Auteuil is great as usual. Carole Bouquet also contributes, albeit with less emotional range. The movie focuses as much on the love between Lucie and Raymond Aubrac as on the historical events surrounding them as they participate in the French Resistance to German occupation during World War II. The movie also contains powerful action scenes of escape and guerilla fighting (which the Germans considered terrorism at the time). Watch for a striking scene where Heino Ferch (as Klaus Barbie) tortures Auteuil (as Lucie's husband Raymond) to obtain information about Resistance leader "Max". Not only is this scene memorably acted and filmed, but it bears on a most controversial event in the history of the Resistance. The script follows a book by Lucie Aubrac that is ostensibly autobiographic. To this day, historians debate whether the Aubracs remained committed to the resistance or whether Raymond actually cracked under torture and betrayed resistance mastermind Jean Moulin ("Max"). Moulin was arrested soon after Raymond left prison and died a hero, refusing to speak under the torture of Klaus Barbie, the "Butcher of Lyons". These events and Barbie's much later in persona trial (1987) still rattle many people's understanding of the morals and history of France in the last sixty-plus years.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Was average, could have been great!, 26 March 2003
Author: donalohanlon from Ireland
Claude Berri began filming this movie in 1996 with Daniel Auteuil
and Juliette Binoche. Berri and the headstrong Binoche came to
(creative) blows over script changes. He wanted to make it more of
a love story, she wanted it to remain more factual and so in a move
unheard of in French cinema he fired his leading actress, who
also happened to be the biggest French star in the world. A few
monthe later she won an Oscar for The English Patient and berri
recast his movie with Carole Bouquet in the lead.
Bouquet is a talented actress, but not in the same league as the
extremely gifted Binoche. Auteuil as usual gives a fine
performance, but the whole excersise seems leaden down by
romanticism.
Binoche and Auteuil went on to star together in Leconte's
altogether better La Veuve de Saint-Pierre
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

great movie, 16 May 2001
Author: maxwellsham
I love french movies what can I say. This one is really good as well. Interesting story I'd never really thought about. I was worried it would be old and bad you know like many period films are but this one is pretty well done. The acting is up to scratch and especially moments when the captives are in the prison and they really are feeling the pain and torture and still managing to resist the urge to stop it. Very few weaknesses as well. Lucie is really beautiful as well a pleasure to watch. Very desparate film which is well resolved. Overall worth a watch. I gave it 8.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

La Resistance, 6 February 2006
Author: B24 from Arizona
Engaging story and performances involving members of the French resistance during World War II. Although I have not yet read the account on which it is based, I have no reason to believe the film takes too many liberties with the truth. The locations and sets seem very authentic, and the dialogue is evocative of the way people spoke at the time. Something exceptional is presented by way of action sequences, in fact, where attempts at re-enacting simple events on film often fail; namely, the interdiction of a convoy carrying prisoners and a particularly realistic execution scene. High marks are due the production crew for this one. The overall history of the French resistance is an extremely complicated tale to be retold for purposes of explaining just how this story resonates. Young viewers need to educate themselves in that history in order to appreciate fully this film's merits.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Excellent, 1 February 1999
Author: Jonno-4 from Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, UK
This film is an excellent tribute to the bravery of the men and women of the French Resistance during the Second World War. The film revolves around Lucie and her attempts to rescue her husband, after he is arrested by the Gestapo at a Resistance meeting. This film is indeed a testimony to Lucie and Raymond's relationship, but in my mind, the film serves equally as an insight into France during the occupation and the political state at the time. An excellent film. - Jonno
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
'Ave A Butcher's At This Great Barbie Doll, 19 January 2004
Author: writers_reign
It's always problematical when a given actor/actress is replaced during filming for whatever reason. Personally I thought Ray Walston was fantastic in 'Kiss Me, Stupid' and can't visualize Peter Sellars even equalling Walston's performance, let alone eclipsing it. So it is here. One commentator bizarrely described Juliet Binoche as the best actress in France. I have every admiration for Binoche and see as many of her films as possible but has the commentator in question never heard of Isabelle Huppert, Nathalie Baye, Suzanne Flon, Sandrine Kiberlain, Manu Beart, etc. Nevertheless this is still a great movie and I for one cannot imagine anyone other than Carole Bouquet as the eponymous heroine. Were this fiction it may be thought a tad over the romantic top to have two lovers celebrate the date they first made love and take a vow to be together on that particular anniversary for as long as they live, but, as we know, this is a True story and BOTH lovers, Auteuil and Bouquet make it believable. There is a certain symmetry here too if anybody asks you. Having established under the credits an active Resistance group in which Auteuil (as Francois Samuel, 'Aubrac' was the Resistance name of the husband and wife team)is prominent we then see him at home in a tender scene with his wife (Bouquet) which establishes the secondary (or primary, depending on your point of view) theme of enduring love, and then, to put things in perspective, we see Lucie in her day job of schoolteacher, spelling out to les enfants the value of history as a learning tool and reminding them that even as they speak they are themselves living history. We are then into a somewhat conventional Resistance story. Brave freedom fighters captured and tortured, one woman's love overcoming the might of the occupying forces. It is interesting that Berri has opted to show Lyon as a sun-filled city - perhaps a hangover from his Jean de Florette/Manon des Sources gig a dozen years earlier - and this not only makes a contrast from the usual bleak, overcast, settings of other Resistance movies, but also points up the horror/barbarism occurring behind closed shutters while the sun pours down on France's Second City. Of course any film on the Resistance has to compete with 'L'Armee des Ombres' and, to a lesser extent, 'Laissez Passer' and if Lucie doesn't quite make it she makes a very creditable and honorable attempt. 8/10
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

An interesting piece of history, 13 May 2007
Author: planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
This is a rather small and quiet WWII film. While the film excels at its realistic portrayal of the French Resistance, it is a film that would be "box office poison" in America because its commercial marketability is pretty limited. This is NOT a film that teens or many prospective viewers would rush to the theaters to see! There are few explosions and the nudity isn't the least bit gratuitous. Because of this, it would only have been made abroad or by an independent film maker and so it wasn't surprising that this film was shown on the Sundance Channel.
The story purports to be about a real couple who worked for the resistance movement. When the husband (Daniel Auteuil) is taken by the Nazis, his devoted wife (Carole Bouquet) tries desperately to free him. Both actors are pretty recognizable to American audiences, as Auteuil has appeared in tons of films--playing a sort of "everyman" character and Bouquet played the female lead in one of the Bond films (FOR YOUR EYES ONLY), though she's done plenty of films as well. For a 40 year-old lady, Bouquet is amazingly beautiful and sensuous--way to go, girl! The action is very low-key but tense and the film is a very enjoyable history lesson designed for an adult and discriminating audience.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

A good effort but too esoteric for the public at large, 6 January 2002
Author: George Parker from Orange County, CA USA
"Lucie Aubrac" tells a slightly tweaked version of the true story of one woman's heroic struggle as a member of the underground Resistance in WWII occupied France. Though artistically and technically excellent, many will find this story only marginally interesting as it lacks the usual suspense, action, and other excesses which the public, especially the young theater-going audiences, expect of such films. Nonetheless, just watching two fine French actors (Bouquet & Auteuil) at work telling a story not oft told in film will be sufficient for many, especially those into Europics who don't mind subtitles.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

A Beautiful Romance in the Second World War, 31 August 2003
Author: Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Lucy Aubrac (Carole Bouquet) is a woman in love with her husband Raymond (Daniel Auteuil). He is an important member of the French resistance and arrested with his friends in a meeting after being betrayed. Lucy will try to rescue him from the Gestapo prison using all the possible ways. A beautiful romance in the Second World War, based on a true story. A correct direction and good performances of the cast make this movie a worthwhile entertainment. My vote is seven.
And we'll come from the shadow...., 15 March 2009
Author: dbdumonteil
A prominent figure of the FRench resistance,Lucie Aubrac was very popular in France.Till her death ,she visited the junior high schools,explaining those dark years to the pupils,answering their questions .She even wrote a small book "La Resistance Expliquée A Mes Enfants" the relevance of which was obvious:she pointed out the important role of women in the Resistance when she wrote :"it's sometimes more dangerous to visit prisoners or to carry documents on your rack than to blow up a train." Carole Bouquet and Daniel Auteuil did a good job ,but Claude Berri didn't really.His movie is MTV quality and it boils down to a woman trying to save her husband and it passes over in silence the stakes in Resistance.We do not really learn anything.Take Melville's "L'Armée Des Ombres"(1969) instead.
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