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Au Revoir Les Enfants
Au Revoir Les Enfants
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List Price: $19.99
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Product Details

  • Starring: Gaspard Manesse, Raphael Fejtö, Francine Racette, Stanislas Carré de Malberg, Philippe Morier-Genoud
  • Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Binding: VHS Tape
  • Director: Louis Malle
  • EAN: 9786301216135
  • Format: NTSC
  • ISBN: 630121613X
  • Label: Orion Classics
  • Manufacturer: Orion Classics
  • Number of Items: 1
  • Product Group: Video
  • Publisher: Orion Classics
  • Release Date: 1990-03-29
  • Studio: Orion Classics
  • Theatrical Release Date: 1987-12
  • Title: Au Revoir Les Enfants
  • UPC: 023568050416
Avg Customer Rating: 5 stars

Product Description: The long shadow of Malle's autobiographical memoir of occupied France continues to fall heavily across subsequent representations of World War II, boarding school, and male adolescence--in fact, it would be difficult to identify a recent film that addresses these concerns and does not, in some substantial way, echo Au Revoir Les Enfants. The straightforward, unsentimental, gutsy Enfants finds its 12-year-old protagonist, Julien Quentin, sheltered from the conflict in a Catholic school. His classmate Jean, a new arrival, becomes first a competitor, then a beloved friend. Jean, however, hides a secret from his classmates and the Gestapo; evenly, subtly, Malle creates an atmosphere of hovering and inescapable danger. It won't take you more than a few frames to guess Jean's "secret," and many of the plot points here are too telescoped. Nevertheless, the plainspoken courage with which Malle tells his story remains wholly engrossing. The cinematography here is masterful and drunk with childlike wonder, alternating claustrophobic, wood-paneled church interiors with vivid, occasionally frightening outdoor vistas. And never is it more affecting than in the chilling scene where Justin gets lost in the woods during a seemingly innocent game of capture-the-treasure; trees and rocks flash by the running boy with an austere, impersonal beauty. Winner of seven Cesars (the French Oscars) in 1987, including Best Picture. It's in French, with subtitles; but don't let that scare you away. --Miles Bethany


Customer Reviews


5 stars Wonderful film
This is a sensitively told story about friendship and war. The story is told through the eyes of 12 year old Julien, and takes place in France during 1944. The cinematography creates a cold, harsh world that reflects the attitudes of many of the adults in the film. Although the film deals with war, it also shows us the simple pleasures in the everyday lives of the boys.


5 stars Au Revoir Les Enfants
Goodbye, Children (Au revoir, les enfants) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.4 Import - Australia ]
A great movie. Moving film about friendship. I can see why it won a gold award in Europe. The acting is excellent, and the movie is well worth buying. If you speak French, it's even more enjoyable. Super movie, and I highly recommended it.


5 stars Lost Innocence
I had heard the "Au Revoir les Enfants" was an exceptional film and I had a pretty good idea what it was about. I watched it the other night and must admit that it IS an exceptional movie. At first I figured that it might be just another over-rated French movie as I watched a well-done production of the standard boy's school hyjinks. However, the characters were more substanitive that usual (even for a group of pre-teens nearing puberty) and the setting of France during WWII added a lot to the dramatic effect.

You could guess what was coming but I kept getting more and more impressed by the depth of the story, supporting cast, and the way Malle let us see Occupied France. We see the collaborators, the anti-semites (somewhat redundant), the ones who buried their heads in the sand, and those brave enough to risk their lives for others. The ending is not action-filled nor overly dramatic. The ending evolves from a series of events that seem to happen too fast and then it is over. A narrator from the future puts it all into perspective as we realize we have glimpsed a scene of horror that happened too easily. Malle has given us an excellent movie and he has given his fellow French an uncomfortable (for many) look at their recent past.


5 stars a beautiful and moving drama.......
I couldn't review SCHINDLER'S LIST, LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL and THE GREAT DICTATOR (films related to some of the darkest saddest times in humanity, during Nazi rule) and pass up AU REVOIR, LES ENFANTS (GOODBYE, CHILDREN). This is, in my opinion, one of the finest films made by the late, great Louis Malle. It is a semi-autobiographical account of a young boy living a sheltered life in a Catholic school and the chance encounter he has with his classmate, who is first a rival and then becomes a beloved friend. This friend is concealing a secret during a time when the Nazis were cracking down on and removing Jews from schools, among other places. I don't need to say too much for you to know the gist of the plot, the pressures that the young protagonists face and the brutal reality of life that hits them smack between the eyes. This film sensitively and honestly depicts their plight, during a very dark point in history. AU REVOIR, LES ENFANTS is truly poetry for the eyes, and you will never be the same after viewing it.


5 stars Essential French cinema: Malle's 'Au revoir les enfants.'
Based on his own childhood boarding school experience, Louis Malle's (1932-1995) Au revoir les enfants ("goodbye children") (1987) tells the heartbreaking story of Julien Quentin (Gaspard Manesse), a young boy who befriends another student, Jean "Bonnet" Kippelstein (Raphaël Fejtö), while attending Sainte-Croix College in Vichy during World War II. Jean is Jewish, and is attending Sainte-Croix to escape persecution in Nazi-occupied France. In January 1944, German soldiers arrive at the school and arrest the school's headmaster, Father Jean (Philippe Morier-Genoud), and three Jewish children, including Jean Bonnet, all of whom are later executed (with the exception of Father Jean, who dies at Mauthausen concentration camp). Malle's film was nominated for two awards, Best Foreign Language Film and Best Original Screenplay, at the 60th Academy Awards; it won the Golden Lion award at the 1987 Venice Film Festival;and at the 1988 César Awards, it won in seven categories, including Best Director, Best Film and Best Writing. This film is as much about friendship as it is about profound loss, and the power of a childhood experience to affect us for a lifetime.

Criterion's superb edition of Malle's subtle coming-of-age film features a new high-definition digital transfer (supervised by director of photography Renato Berta), the original theatrical trailer, and improved English subtitles. Highly recommended.

G. Merritt