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THE SORROW AND THE PITY

by Marcel Ophüls

synopsis

From 1940 to 1944, France's Vichy government collaborated with Nazi Germany. Marcel Ophüls mixes archival footage with 1969 interviews of a German officer and of collaborators and resistance fighters from Clermont-Ferrand. They comment on the nature, details and reasons for the collaboration, from anti-Semitism, xenophobia, and fear of Bolsheviks, to simple caution. Part one, "The Collapse," includes an extended interview with Pierre Mendès-France, jailed for anti-Vichy action and later France's Prime Minister. At the heart of part two, "The Choice," is an interview with Christian de la Mazière, one of 7,000 French youth to fight on the eastern front wearing German uniforms.

international title: The Sorrow and the Pity
original title: Le chagrin et la pitié
country: Switzerland, Germany
year: 1969
genre: fiction
directed by: Marcel Ophüls
film run: 251'
release date: DE 18/09/1969, FR 05/04/1971, UK 10/09/1971, IT 07/10/1971, CH 02/1972, BE 04/1972, SE 16/11/1972, FI 20/03/1973, NL 07/12/1995, CZ 12/04/2003, GR 09/2007
screenplay: André Harris, Marcel Ophüls
cast: Georges Bidault, Matthäus Bleibinger, Charles Braun
cinematography by: André Gazut, Jürgen Thieme
film editing: Claude Vajda
producer: André Harris, Alain de Sedouy
co-producer: Charles-Henri Favrod

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