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  • The Army Of Crime

    THE ARMY OF CRIME
    JORDAN MINTZER

    Variety
    http://www.variety.com/review/VE1 117940302.html?categoryid=31&cs=1
    May 19 2009

    Powered By A StudioCanal release of an Agat Films & Cie, StudioCanal,
    France 3 Cinema production, with participation of Canal Plus,
    CineCinema, France 3, L'Agence Nationale pour la Cohesion Sociale
    et L'Egalite des Chances -- L'ACSE -- Fonds Images de la Diversite,
    CNC. (International sales: StudioCanal, Paris.) Produced by Dominique
    Barneaud, Marc Bordure, Robert Guediguian. Directed by Robert
    Guediguian. Screenplay, Guediguian, Serge Le Peron, Gilles Taurand,
    based on an original idea by Peron.

    With: Simon Abkarian, Virginie Ledoyen, Robinson Stevenin, Gregoire
    Leprince-Ringuet, Lola Naymark, Yann Tregouet, Ariane Ascaride,
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin, Ivan Franek, Adrien Jolivet.

    Despite a title and subject similar to Jean-Pierre Melville's 1969
    masterwork "The Army of Shadows," Gallic wartime fresco "The Army
    of Crime" is a less thrilling and more academic take on the doomed
    efforts of the French Resistance. Based on the actual plights of a
    WWII underground immigrant brigade, vet helmer Robert Guediguian's
    lengthy period yarn features a wide array of characters filmed with
    his habitual simpatico eye, but loses the dramatic thread in too many
    plots, too little action and not enough originality. Imposing "Army"
    should score local victories, but overseas campaigns will be limited
    to mere surgical strikes.

    Widely popular in French WWII lore and previously tackled by the 1976
    film "L'Affiche rouge," the FTP-MOI was a Parisian-based branch of the
    Resistance whose members were Communist immigrants hailing from all
    parts of Europe. When 10 of its top fighters were executed in early
    1944, the Vichy regime plastered a now legendary red-colored poster
    around Paris that depicted the men as terrorists and bore the slogan
    "Liberators? The Liberation, by the Army of Crime."

    Beginning with the group's final paddy wagon ride to the firing
    range and then cutting to two-plus hours of backstory, the script
    initially hops between the four protags until uniting them about
    halfway through. Although such a structure allows the filmmakers to
    painstakingly construct the trajectory of each character, it severely
    hinders the flow of the narrative and fails to make the ongoing threat
    of capture, torture and death seem either real or suspenseful.

    The plot focuses primarily on the band's Armenian-born leader, Missak
    Manouchian (played by French-Armenian actor Simon Abkarian), who's
    first arrested and then released from prison while his fighting,
    charmer g.f. (Virginie Ledoyen) watches in disbelief: A seductive,
    soft-spoken poet with strong political convictions but little desire
    to draw blood, Missak soon takes up the reigns of a movement whose
    principal activities entail distributing pamphlets and slaying Nazis
    in the street.

    He finds a pair of worthy acolytes in two young Jewish troublemakers,
    Marxist bomb-rigger Thomas (Gregory Leprince-Ringuet) and athletic
    sharpshooter Marcel (Robinson Stevenin). As their collected killings
    get increasingly gruesome, the SS-administered police begin to crack
    down on their network, using a local detective (played by Guediguian
    regular Jean-Pierre Darroussin) to snuff out those in charge.

    Had the story concentrated merely on Missak and his two cohorts, it
    might have been engaging in the way of Melville's film, which limited
    the action to Lino Ventura's harrowing p.o.v. But its cumbersome
    attempt to follow 18 characters (including the three protags' different
    friends and family members) makes for too many minor plots, which
    are handled in quick succession with little cinematic intensity.

    What Guediguian gets right is the eerie mood of Vichy-era France,
    where most of the population continued life as usual while their
    fellow countrymen were being shipped off to Auschwitz or burned
    alive at their local police station. Well-chosen exteriors, filmed in
    warm hues by Pierre Milon ("The Class"), make for an oddly tranquil
    atmosphere interrupted by sudden surges of violence, recalling moments
    from the director's Marseilles-set thrillers "The Town Is Quiet" and
    "Lady Jane."

    Thesps are so many and so scattered that no performance is a standout,
    though Leprince-Ringuet ("Love Songs") gives his character some
    pizzazz.

    Alexandre Desplat's intrusive score, plus a good deal of additional
    Bach and Mozart, winds up sucking the energy from certain pivotal
    scenes.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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