Is Paris Burning? (film)

Is Paris Burning? (French: Paris brûle-t-il ?) is a 1966 epic war film about the liberation of Paris in August 1944 by the French Resistance and the Free French Forces during World War II. A French-American co-production, it is directed by French filmmaker René Clément, with a screenplay by Gore Vidal, Francis Ford Coppola, Jean Aurenche, Pierre Bost, and Claude Brulé; adapted from the book of the same title by Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre. The film stars an international ensemble cast that includes French (Jean-Paul Belmondo, Alain Delon, Bruno Cremer, Pierre Vaneck, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Leslie Caron, Charles Boyer, Yves Montand), American (Orson Welles, Kirk Douglas, Glenn Ford, Robert Stack, Anthony Perkins, George Chakiris), and German (Gert Fröbe, Hannes Messemer, Ernst Fritz Fürbringer, Harry Meyen) stars.

Is Paris Burning?
American theatrical film poster
Directed byRené Clément
Produced byPaul Graetz
Screenplay by
Based onIs Paris Burning
by Larry Collins
Dominique Lapierre.
Starring
Music byMaurice Jarre
CinematographyMarcel Grignon
Edited byRobert Lawrence
Production
company
  • Marianne Productions
  • Transcontinental Films
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • 26 October 1966 (1966-10-26) (France)
  • 10 November 1966 (1966-11-10) (U.S.)
Running time
173 minutes
Country
  • France
  • United States
Box office$37.1 million[1]

The film was released in France on October 26, 1966 and in the United States on November 10, 1966. It received general positive reviews, and was the fourth most popular movie of the year in France in 1966.[2][3] It was nominated for Best Cinematography (Black and White) and Academy Award for Best Art Direction at the 40th Academy Awards, and a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score.

Plot

Shortly after the failed 20 July plot to assassinate him in 1944, Adolf Hitler, appoints General der Infanterie Dietrich von Choltitz as military governor of occupied Paris. Hitler believes Choltitz will obey his order that the Allies should not be allowed to capture Paris without the Germans destroying it completely, similar to the planned destruction of Warsaw.

The French Resistance learn that the Allies are not planning to take Paris, but are heading straight to Germany instead. The two factions within the Resistance react to this news differently. The Gaullists under Jacques Chaban-Delmas want to wait and see, while the Communists under Colonel Rol-Tanguy want to take action. The Communists force the issue by calling for a general uprising by the citizens of Paris and by occupying important government buildings. The Gaullists go along with this plan of action once it is set in motion.

Initially, Choltitz is intent on following Hitler's order to level the city. After his troops fail to dislodge the Resistance from the Prefecture of Police, he orders the Luftwaffe to bomb the building but withdraws the order at the urging of the Swedish Consul, Raoul Nordling, who points out that bombs that miss the Prefecture risk destroying nearby culturally invaluable buildings such as the Notre Dame Cathedral. Choltitz accepts a truce offer from the Resistance (conceived by the Gaullist faction), but the Communists want to keep on fighting, in spite of a lack of ammunition. The truce is, therefore, shortened to one day and the fighting resumes.

After learning that the Germans plan to destroy Paris (the Eiffel Tower and other landmarks are rigged with explosives), a messenger from the Resistance is sent across enemy lines to contact the Americans. He informs the Allies that the Resistance has already taken control of parts of the city and implores them to provide support to prevent the uprising being crushed as was then happening in Warsaw. He adds that France would never forgive the destruction of Paris. Afterwards General Omar Bradley gives the 2nd Armored Division under General Philippe Leclerc the go-ahead to rush on Paris.

As the military situation deteriorates, Choltitz delays the order to destroy Paris, believing that Hitler is insane and that the war is lost, making the destruction of Paris a futile gesture. He chooses instead to surrender shortly after the Allies enter the city.

As the Free French Forces and De Gaulle parade down the streets of Paris, greeted by cheering crowds, a phone receiver off the hook is seen with a voice in German repeatedly asking "Is Paris burning?" From the air, Paris is seen, its buildings still intact and standing, followed by a sudden switch from black and white to color.

Cast

French resistance

Neutral participants

Allied forces

German occupation

Production

The film is based on the best-selling book by Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre and was directed by René Clément, from a screenplay by Gore Vidal and Francis Ford Coppola.[4]

The film was shot in black and white mainly because, although the French authorities would allow Nazi swastika flags to be displayed on public buildings for key shots, they would not permit those flags to be in their original red color; as a result, green swastika flags were used, which photographed adequately in black and white but would have been entirely the wrong color. However, the closing credits feature aerial shots of Paris in color.

The production was filmed in 180 sites throughout Paris; including Rue de la Huchette, Place des Vosges, Les Invalides, Place de la Concorde, Notre-Dame, the Latin Quarter, and Musée Carnavalet. According to screenwriter Francis Ford Coppola, the film's production was strictly controlled by Charles de Gaulle. The latter would only permit location filming in Paris (which was, of course, crucial) if his rules were obeyed to the letter. In particular, he was anxious to minimize the part played in the Liberation by the French Communist Party; it was, said Coppola, blatant political censorship.

Claude Rich plays two parts: General Leclerc, with a moustache, and Lt. Pierre de la Fouchardière, without a moustache. He is credited at the end only with the part of Leclerc. His role as the young lieutenant is not by chance: Claude Rich, as a teenager, was watching soldiers in the street when the real-life Pierre de la Fouchardière called him into a building to protect him. Actor Orson Welles repeatedly clashed with director René Clément, refusing to speak directly to whom despite being fluent in French. Reportedly, Welles was upset that Clement had been given such a large budget for a project, while he had been struggling to find financing for his projects.

As the film had a predominately French cast, all sequences featuring French and German actors were filmed in their native French and German languages respectively, which was then dubbed into English, while all the sequences with the American actors (including Orson Welles) were filmed in English. Separate French and English-language dubs were produced for their respective territories.

Music

The score was composed by Maurice Jarre. Jarre's music for "The Paris Waltz" had words added later by Maurice Vidalin and became a patriotic anthem sung by Mireille Mathieu under the title Paris en colère.

Reception

The film was the fourth most popular movie of the year in France in 1966.[2][3]

Awards and honors

The film was nominated for two Academy Awards:[5]

The film was spoofed in Mad magazine, in the September 1967 issue (#113), under the title "Is Paris Boring?"[6]

gollark: Ah yes, the "edexcel large data set".
gollark: I might make it dump into the comments system or something.
gollark: Exciting new osmarks.net service coming soon™: send osmarks.net arbitrary data via DNS!
gollark: Or regexes.
gollark: Or BSON, for mongoDB webscaleness.

References

  1. "Paris brûle-t-il ? (1966)". JPBox-Office.
  2. Box office information for Alain Delon films at Box Office Story
  3. "French Box Office 1966". Box Office Story.
  4. Scheuer, Philip K. (Oct 10, 1965). "Paris Officialdom Burning Over Rash of War Pictures". Los Angeles Times. p. b3.
  5. "NY Times: Is Paris Burning?". New York Times. Retrieved 26 December 2008.
  6. "Doug Gilford's Mad Cover Site – Mad #113". madcoversite.com.

Further reading

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