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      • La Grande Illusion is a sublimely poignant and lucidly insightful commentary on the social legacy of the Great War in Europe. Filmed in 1937 under the looming advent of World War II, La Grande Illusion serves as a haunting elegy for the tragedy of the First World War and a relevant cautionary tale on the immeasurable toll of war.
      filmref.com › 2017/12/22 › la-grande-illusion-1937
  1. La Grande Illusion (French for "The Grand Illusion") is a 1937 French war drama film directed by Jean Renoir, who co-wrote the screenplay with Charles Spaak. The story concerns class relationships among a small group of French officers who are German prisoners of war during World War I and are plotting an escape.

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  3. An explicitly anti-war film, La Grande Illusion advocates human solidarity across national and class barriers: the French and German aristocrats bond over memories of Maxim’s and horses while the lower ranks on both sides are unanimous in their opinion that the war has gone on too long.

  4. Here is the beginning of an answer to the question as to why the Grand Illusion has such magical power. It is the enduring, indeed the classic cinematic statement of indirection, of disclosing war by not showing it.

  5. Dec 15, 2020 · The form of Boëldieu's sacrifice is remarkable, and perfectly in line with the themes of Grand Illusion. A fire in the Russian barracks has convinced him that any decent-sized distraction could occupy the guards long enough for Rosenthal and Maréchal to escape, but—unlike its inspiration—the distraction he chooses is not a destructive one.

  6. La Grande Illusion is a film too human and complex to be reduced to a simple message. It follows the struggles of a group of French POWs (and their German captors) as they individually try to preserve some sense of perspective on life - some inkling of what makes existence precious - in the face of a war that makes it unbearable.

  7. Oct 3, 1999 · The movie, filmed as the clouds of World War II were gathering, uses these characters to illustrate how the themes of the first war would tragically worsen in the second. So pointed was Renoir's message that when the Germans occupied France, “Grand Illusion” was one of the first things they seized.

  8. Jean Renoir’s most popular and well-known work, La Grande Illusion (Grand Illusion, 1937), is considered one of the all-time great anti-war films, but there is almost no combat portrayed. Instead, the action, set mostly in World War I German prisoner-of-war camps, concerns the escape efforts of several French officers confined in the camps.

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