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  1. Au revoir les enfants (French pronunciation: [o ʁə.vwaʁ le zɑ̃.fɑ̃], meaning "Goodbye, Children") is an autobiographical 1987 film written, produced, and directed by Louis Malle. It is based on the actions of Père Jacques, a French priest and headmaster who attempted to shelter Jewish children during the Holocaust.

  2. Feb 12, 1988 · An elegantly crafted tale of friendship, compassion & boyhood, Au Revoir Les Enfants is a heartbreaking, poignant & tragic cinema that's actually based on the events which took place during the childhood of this film's director and is an endearing portrait of life at school, student rivalry & beauty of friendship.

    • (36K)
    • Drama, War
    • Louis Malle
    • 1988-02-12
  3. May 7, 2006 · One of the foundations of Louis Malle's "Au revoir les enfants" (1987) is how naturally he evokes the daily life of a French boarding school in 1944. His central story shows young life hurtling forward; he knows, because he was there, that some of these lives will be exterminated.

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  5. Watch Au Revoir, les enfants with a subscription on Max. Louis Malle's autobiographical tale of a childhood spent in a WWII boarding school is a beautifully realized portrait of friendship...

    • (37)
    • Louis Malle
    • PG
    • Gaspard Manesse
  6. “Au revoir les enfants” (“Goodbye, Children”) is a film about such a moment, about a quick, unthinking glance that may have cost four people their lives. The film was written and directed by Louis Malle, who based it on a childhood memory.

  7. Aug 15, 2007 · Au Revoir, Les Enfants (1987) -- (Movie Clip) Turns Your Brains To Mush Secretly Jewish new kid Jean (Raphael Fejto) outstanding in math class, interrupted by an Allied air raid on Nazi-occupied Paris, getting paired with new friend and rival Julien (Gaspard Manesse) in the shelter, in Louis Malle's Au Revoir, Les Enfants, 1987.

  8. Mar 15, 2011 · Given such moments, Au revoir les enfants —for all its tragic subject matter and its elegiac finale—is anything but depressing. In the last scene, as the three Jewish boys and Père Jean are led away to their deaths, Bonnet glances back, and Julien (or, rather, the young Louis Malle) raises his hand in timid salute.

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