The close readings here are strong, and on the whole the writing is lively and concise, with chapters divided into three sections: Recording and Remembering the Great War; Women at the Front; and a third section devoted expressly to Jean Renoir's La Grande illusion (1937).
Journal of Popular Film and Television
Block and Nevin have put together an excellent, ably edited collection of essays on French cinema and WW I. Though all the usual films that one might expect in such a collection are here, there are also some interesting outliers. One example is experimental filmmaker Germaine Dulac’s Le cinéma au service de l'histoire (1935), a rediscovered six-reel montage film using newsreels of the period to create a sort of collage of the events of the war. Among the more outré films are Une page de gloire (1915) and The Little American (1917), to say nothing of Philippe de Broca’s King of Hearts (1966), originally Le roi de coeur, a romantic comedy (set in the last days of the Great War) in which the inmates of an insane asylum escape and take over a small French village. Of course, no such book would be complete without Jean Renoir’s La Grande Illusion (1937), perhaps the greatest antiwar film ever made, which is the subject of several essays. Including detailed footnotes, this admirable, compelling volume could also serve as a course text.
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals; general readers.
CHOICE
[A] fantastic new book.
Culturethèque