Vive la France (1974) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
One of a kind documentary on France
pete366 October 2018
The famous and most succesfull French screenwriter Michel Audiard delivers his own very personal view on the recent history of France.

It looks and feels like one of those zillion b&w TV documentaries on war and history but the comparison ends there. Audiard's view on recent French history proves rambling and incoherent but at the same time so politically incorrect it becomes great fun. Made in the mid-seventies, when you still could get away with all this, like his mourning on the disappearance of the famous "maison closes" (high-class bordello's), his total contempt for De Gaulle and the French army, his laconic view on Hitler and the Nazis (le fou attaque !) : it's crazy stuff. He produced, edited and narrated it all by himself. On release VLF was a total flop : almost no one saw it and Audiard went back to screenwriting. The documentary was almost completely forgotten until it was rediscovered on Youtube by a new generation and "Vive la France" now proves to be something of a small hit on the internet.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
WW2 and Les Trois Glorieuses.
dbdumonteil2 September 2016
Michel Audiard was first a screenwriters whose lines for the last Gabin movies were often memorable ;in 1968,he began a director career and produced a lot of comedies a la Française such as" Faut Pas Prendre Les Enfants Du Bon Dieu Pour Des Enfants Sauvages" or "Le Drapeau Noir Flotte Sur La Marmite" ,the titles speak for themselves.

If the stubborn witty spirit of Sacha Guitry whispered in someone's ears in 1974,it's certainly Michel Audiard's ;Guitry told,in his own way ,the history of his country ,but he stops at WW2,because he runs into trouble after the Liberation.

Fans of Godard ,be warned though:this is not the kind of movie you may expect:unlike Guitry ,who reconstructed history,Audiard's effort is a documentary,which entirely consists of archival footage ,from ,roughly,the pre-WW2 era to present (1974 that is;when Georges Pompidou was president:he was to die that very year)

Audiard tells the story :he is caustic ,insolent ,his voice recalling that of Guitry in his historical works:for instance,a Reductio ad Absurdum proves us that the Vichy government did not happen!Many songs are included ,notably " En Revenant De La Revue" ,which was heard in Renoir's "La Règle Du Jeu" (1939).In spite of the title,France does not always come off well in all those years.

Unlike the other Audiard movies,this one is almost never screened on TV;it as not a success when it was theatrically released :the form certainly put off the audience who did not recognize "their Audiard"
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed