In another brilliant collaboration between director Costa-Gavras and screenwriter Jorge Semprún (Z, State of Siege), we journey Nazi-occupied France where young resistance members, living up to the French ideals of freedom, and in stark opposition to Marshall Pétain and his ministers' eagerness to please the invaders, decide to kill German soldiers. This event leads the Vichy government to institute a special court of law to trial and sentence to death communists, Jews, anarchists and other undesirables on spurious charges, just to appease the Germans, who threaten to kill 50 eminent Frenchmen - like judges and lawyers.
The movie chronicles how the government, the minister of justice, his judges and everyone else involved in the judicial system, change the constitution, pass special laws, and choose the scapegoats. Throughout we also see a few voices rising against the injustice, but they're quickly silenced or ignored. In the end these exceptional courts - the Special Sections of the title - are carried out with almost complete unanimity amongst the judicial class.
This is what Costa-Gavras wishes to show and condemn, the conformity and complicity of these people with their invaders, the execution of innocent people for political reasons, and the use and abuse of the law to hide injustice. The movie is shot very surgically, almost like a documentary, with some dramatic licenses, of course. Costa-Gavras can't be accused of not knowing how to mix heavy subjects with mainstream storytelling.
A deviation from his his fast-paced thrillers like Z and State of Siege, this movie is more of a drama, and an exceptionally good one, deserving of more popularity amongst cinema lovers. It's interesting, informative and possibly mind-changing.
The movie chronicles how the government, the minister of justice, his judges and everyone else involved in the judicial system, change the constitution, pass special laws, and choose the scapegoats. Throughout we also see a few voices rising against the injustice, but they're quickly silenced or ignored. In the end these exceptional courts - the Special Sections of the title - are carried out with almost complete unanimity amongst the judicial class.
This is what Costa-Gavras wishes to show and condemn, the conformity and complicity of these people with their invaders, the execution of innocent people for political reasons, and the use and abuse of the law to hide injustice. The movie is shot very surgically, almost like a documentary, with some dramatic licenses, of course. Costa-Gavras can't be accused of not knowing how to mix heavy subjects with mainstream storytelling.
A deviation from his his fast-paced thrillers like Z and State of Siege, this movie is more of a drama, and an exceptionally good one, deserving of more popularity amongst cinema lovers. It's interesting, informative and possibly mind-changing.