Beau Travail

Beau Travail

2002 "Maybe freedom begins with remorse."
Beau Travail
Beau Travail

Beau Travail

7.3 | 1h32m | R | en | Drama

Foreign Legion officer Galoup recalls his once glorious life, training troops in the Gulf of Djibouti. His existence there was happy, strict and regimented, until the arrival of a promising young recruit, Sentain, plants the seeds of jealousy in Galoup's mind.

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7.3 | 1h32m | R | en | Drama | More Info
Released: March. 31,2002 | Released Producted By: La Sept-Arte , Pathé Télévision Country: France Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Foreign Legion officer Galoup recalls his once glorious life, training troops in the Gulf of Djibouti. His existence there was happy, strict and regimented, until the arrival of a promising young recruit, Sentain, plants the seeds of jealousy in Galoup's mind.

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Cast

Denis Lavant , Michel Subor , Grégoire Colin

Director

Arnaud de Moléron

Producted By

La Sept-Arte , Pathé Télévision

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Reviews

Jose Cruz This film is extremely artsy, though it is not a boring film: plenty of stuff keeps happening so that you are constantly being entertained by it. It is a rather modern art-house film in that it is edited so that it flows at a much faster pace than, let's say, Bergman's films. So it is more watchable for someone who is not that into artsy films, such as me.It has a very strong ending as well. Dramatic without being melodramatic. The film also has a plot that is rather hidden and I needed to think a little about it before I understood it. There is also the fact that this film has very strong homoerotic undertones and women and gay men will like that.
chaos-rampant Abstract film, told by contrasts, stylized swathes of life, Claires Denis stumbles upon little that is new here, but something here intrigues me a lot, most of it in the first half.The rites, rituals and ceremonial pomp by which army units in the line of fire choose to mythologize and invoke a story of heroic braggadoccio, which Claires Denis approaches with a curious air of the solemn and the mocking, I only briefly experienced in my short time with an infantry regime. I served most of my army time in the Technician Corps, the inglorious greasemonkeys, repairing tanks or slacking. But the tedium of army life is our shared legacy with the Foreign Legion or the Special Ops.Denis subverts this, in mocking feminism reducing that tedium to the meticulous ironing and creasing of uniforms and laundry. The savage beast is thus shown to be domesticated, fussing over a crease. It's been a man's cinema this first century, so perhaps we should get accustomed to the scorn and irony of female directors getting back at us. Nevertheless she makes a cutting remark, that fastidiousness (a matter of order and appearances) is accomplished with these creases.Inside the discotheque, where the strobe lights and Arab pop beats are equally kitsch and otherworldly, the woman is mysterious and alluring, exudes promises of sexual danger. In this game of seduction, the Legionnaires are rapacious, overly eager boys, crossing and recrossing before the seductive female gaze and smile. This first part for me is two images. The flickering shot of an Arab girl's face, gleaming with strobing colorful lights, and the shot of Legionnaires etched in silhouette in an empty street by night.Here lies the brilliance of Denis though. We know the emerging story of a cruel superior taking an unfathomable dislike to the innocent footsoldier from Billy Bud, Herman Melville's short story, and how that innocence of face invites a hatred that seethes deeper, but Denis reworks this entirely in terms of cinema. Looking at the sergeant's face we can read the portents of evil to come, but she further paints it with pictures.Ideals don't matter here, so Denis aptly carries her tragedy out to a sunbaked rocky desert. Perhaps she understood what she was doing as an opera, but in those scenes where we see men flexing their muscles or performing curious rituals out in the open air, the bombast of music and image verges on camp. I don't know much about camp though, so this doesn't concern me overmuch. She also gives us a tracking shot and a wistful tune in the soundtrack, which I find both to be beneath the filmmaking she exhibits in the rest of the film.Elsewhere she gives us images of colonial guilt, a popular subject of the European intellectual, where for example a process of Legionnaires carry a black man, then they switch and he carries a white man on his shoulders. The Djibouti natives of that desert mostly observe this ritual of male aggression with indifference though, curiosity or compassion.A lot of what the film does is only fair, and although thematically it leaves me unfulfilled, the apogee for me is the lasting impression. Of which Beau Travail leaves a strong one.
ib-44 A remake of Billy Budd in the context of the French Foreign Legion is a brilliant idea. Changing the point of view to the older, envious Sr NCO is also a brilliant idea. The film is beautifully shot.However... This has to be least convincing portrayal of everyday life in the Legion ever made. Young Legionaires don't have birthday parties with their CO. And they don't spend a lot of time frolicking on the beach. It's true they do spend a lot of time ironing, doing laundry, and holes, but the rigid discipline and hyper-masculinity that the Legion is known for is nowhere to be seen. My disbelief could not be suspended.
alibis claire denis portrays the French Foreign Legion from a feminine viewpoint. the result is a beautiful, sensual, almost sexy movie, i especially liked the way the bodies of the men were depicted. it is absolutely necessary to watch this movie in the cinema, on the small screen it loses its most important factor, that is the visual aspect. the dancing is poetic, but not at all realistic. the degree of artistic abstraction concerning the army leads to some irritation for some people which have actually been to the army, because they know that it is far from reality. the problem altogether is that beau travail is probably not going to make a lasting impression on most people, because it plays with superficial emotions.