Pondichéry, dernier comptoir des Indes

Pondichéry, dernier comptoir des Indes (original French title) ("Pondicherry, last trading post in India" in English, released as “Last Trading Post in India” ) is a 1997 French drama film set during Pondicherry's independence from France in 1954.[1]

Pondichéry, dernier comptoir des Indes
Directed byBernard Favre
Produced byA Films/Frédéric Marboeuf
Written byBernard Favre and Marcel Beaulieu
CinematographyJean-Marie Dreujou
Edited byEmmanuelle Thibault
Release date
March 26, 1997
Running time
92 min.
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Plot

The fictional film is set during Pondicherry's independence from France in 1954. It tells the story of Stanislas Charvin, a young European male born in India but raised in Marseilles,[2] France by his grandmother. Stanislas returns to Pondicherry as the French administration are preparing to leave; he intends to collect his mother’s remains for repatriation to France for burial. While in India, he learns that his mother has not died but has disappeared. Stanislas discovers that she left her husband André for Weber, a half-caste man, and is consequently shunned and despised by her community. During the course of the film, Stanislas meets his father (whom he hates) but reconciles with him before his death.[1]

The film explores the self-discovery of the young 20 year-old Stanislas against the backdrop of the "great departure" as we see several images of boxes and suitcases in the background. The final message to appear before the credits roll makes an explicit connection between the loss of the "comptoirs" in India and the Algerian War: “November 1st, 1954, Pondicherry rejoins India as the Algerian insurrection explodes”. The film also depicts Granier (the last French administrator in Pondicherry) shouting “Pondicherry, the capital of nowhere!” as he departs the colony in the final scenes of the production.[3]

Cast

The film stars Frédéric Gorny as Stanislas Charvin, Richard Bohringer as André Charvin, Charles Aznavour as Leo Baumann, Vanessa Lhoste as Clémence and K. Kaartikeyan as Weber. Frédéric Gorny would receive the “Prix Raimu de la comédie” for his role in the film in 1997.[4]

Technical notes

The sets were designed by noted Indian production designer and art director Thota Tharani.[5]

Reception

The film was largely derided by critics in France. One author (Jackie Assayag) delivers a scathing critique of the film and its "sentimental clichés" in a 1999 book.[3]

gollark: You can do that with a £30 SDR or whatever (and antennas I guess).
gollark: Why would you need a license to *listen* to things?
gollark: > A Windows (Windows 7+) or Mac (Mac OS 10.8+) desktop or laptop with either 2GB or 4GB of RAM (no tablets, smartphones or Linux)Wow, bee their exam software requirements?
gollark: Does that exist in the UK?
gollark: (also, all the clubs are quite far away)

References

  1. "PONDICHÉRY, DERNIER COMPTOIR DES INDES (1997)". BFI.org.uk. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
  2. "Pondichery, dernier comptoir des Indes". www.cinefil.com (in French). Retrieved November 2, 2016.
  3. Marsh, Kate (2007). Fictions of 1947: Representations of Indian Decolonization 1919-1962. 60 of Modern French identities. Peter Lang. ISBN 9783039110339.
  4. "FRÉDÉRIC GORNY". arte-mare.eu (in French). October 23, 2014. Archived from the original on January 21, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
  5. "Thota Tharani". Focus Art Gallery. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
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