
Academy Awards 1939 - Nominated - Best Picture
National Board of Review Awards 1938 - Won - Best Foreign Film
New York Film Critics Circle Awards 1939 - Won - Best Foreign Language Film
Venice Film Festival 1937 - Nominated - Mussolini Cup
Academy Awards 1939 - Nominated - Best Picture
National Board of Review Awards 1938 - Won - Best Foreign Film
New York Film Critics Circle Awards 1939 - Won - Best Foreign Language Film
Venice Film Festival 1937 - Nominated - Mussolini Cup
Venice Film Festival 1937 - Won - Best Artistic Contribution
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The Grand Illusion
Film SynopsisFrequently cited as both one of the greatest films about war and one of the greatest films ever made, Jean Renoir's La Grande Illusion is an often witty, sometimes poignant, frequently moving examination of the futility of war. During World War I, three French airmen are shot down while taking surveillance photographs in German territory: Capt. de Boeldieu (Pierre Fresnay), a wealthy and aristocratic officer; Lt. Maréchal (Jean Gabin), a burly but intelligent working-class mechanic; and Rosenthal (Marcel Dalio), a prosperous Jewish banker. Get Involved |
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Jamey Sheridan
celebrity
John Cameron Mitchell
celebrityRuntime:
114 min.
Genre:
Drama
Country:
FRANCE
Language:
French
Color:
Black & White
Plot Summary
The three are brought to a P.O.W. camp, where the commander, Von Rauffenstein (Erich von Stroheim), takes an immediate liking to de Boeldieu. They are members of the same social class and believe that the political and intellectual ideals of the Europe they once knew will soon be a thing of the past with the rise to power of the proletariat. The three Frenchmen discover that their fellow prisoners have been digging an escape tunnel, and all of them agree to help — Maréchal and Rosenthal with enthusiasm, de Boeldieu out of a sense of duty. As he puts it, when on a golf course, one plays golf, and while in a prison camp, one tries to escape — it's the accepted thing to do. As Von Rauffenstein and de Boeldieu become friends, and the rank-and-file soldiers banter as much with the German guards as with each other, the characters seem involved less in a war than in some vast, petty game, albeit one with deadly consequences; they often talk about women and food, while never mentioning political ideology.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
Memorable Quotes
Capt. von Rauffenstein: May the earth lie lightly upon our valiant enemy.
Lieutenant Maréchal: The theater's too deep for me. I prefer bicycling.
Lieutenant Rosenthal: Frontiers are an invention of men. Nature doesn't give a hoot.
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Directed by
Jean Renoir
Writing credits
Jean Renoir
Charles Spaak
Cast
| Jean Gabin | ||
| Dita Parlo | ||
| Pierre Fresnay | ||
| Erich von Stroheim | ||
| Julien Carette | ||
| Georges Péclet | ||
| Werner Florian | ||
| Jean Dasté | ||
| Sylvain Itkine | ||
| Gaston Modot |
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