| Francois Leterrier, Roland Monod ,
Jacques Ertaud, Roger Planchon, Roger Treherne , Maurice Beerblock,
Charles LeClainche In a genre crowded with quality films, director
Robert Bresson's POW drama has become legendary, in part because
it strips down the experience of a man desperate to escape to the
essentials. That's in keeping with the approach Bresson took with
all of his films. The filmmaker, who spent a year in a German prison
camp during World War II, based this story on the experiences of
Andre Devigny, a French Resistance fighter sent in 1943 to the infamous
prison in Lyons, where 7,000 of the 10,000 prisoners housed there
died either by natural means or by execution. Lt. Fontaine (Francois
Leterrier) is certain that execution awaits him, and he almost immediately
begins planning his escape, using homemade tools and an ingenuity
for detecting the few weaknesses in the prison's structure and routine.
For a time, he goes it alone, then takes on a partner, but only
reluctantly. Fontaine does get some help from a couple of prisoners
allowed to stroll in the exercise yard, but for the most part he
is a figure in isolation. For Bresson, the process of escape is
all, and in simplifying his narrative he ratchets up the tension,
creating a film story of survival that many feel is without peer. |