Battle Of Algiers (DVD)
Gillo Pontecorvo
Currently unavailable
SHIPS FREE in U.S.
Amoeba Review
Sean Sweeney 12/31/1969
Starring: Brahim Hadjadj, Jean Martin, Saadi Yacef.
3-Disc, Widescreen version. Arabic & French Language with optional English subtitles.
Special Features include:
The Battle Of Algiers was released in the United States as the war in Vietnam was making many Americans sympathetic to the victims of colonialists. The film had a massive impact and scored awards all over the world. It would win the prestigious Silver Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival and strangely, for technical reasons, it would be nominated in 1967 for the Best Foreign Film Oscar and two years later it would get nominated for Best Director and for Best Screenplay (I’m not sure if any other film has received three Oscar nominations in two different years, two years apart).
The film attempts to tell both sides of this dirty little war, the Algerian nationalists fighting for independence, known as the National Liberation Front (FLN) led by a petty criminal, Ali (Brahim Hadjadj). Ali gets radicalized in prison, joins up with the FLN and through his courage and cunning becomes a national symbol of resistance. The brutal French military are led by Colonel Mathieu (Jean Martin) who, though he is strongly pro-French and pro-military, by the end shows strong admiration for the FLN. The Algerians in the film are mostly "non-actors" and are very believable. Interestingly, real life FLN leader Saadi Yacef plays himself, a substantial role - he’s the guy who recruits Ali. He probably could have continued working in films, he’s that good. He is also credited as a producer on the film.
The Battle of Algiers is not boring history class homework; it works as a thriller as well. Like most rebellions and guerrilla wars both sides use brutal tactics to get the job done. In one superbly suspenseful scene the FLN employ women, getting them dolled up to mesh with the Europeans, who then go into the French district to set off bombs. In one shocking scene they blow up a malt shop full of swinging French teenagers and an ice cream parlor full of families. In a sign that Pontecorvo is not looking to completely take the side of the Algerians, the aftermath of those bombings, the gathering of the victims, is shown while Morricone’s elegiac music plays. On the other hand the French military uses extreme torture and the racist French mobs attack Algerians indiscriminately.
The film has often been seen as a "How To Guide" for overthrowing an occupying force. You see the FLN lost the battle for Algiers, but inspired the people outside the city - the mountain and rural people of Algeria - to rise up, and with those numbers the French occupation was hopeless. Over the years the film has continued to stir controversies. In South Africa, Ireland, and Israel - obviously with the occupiers not wanted - their tightly-wound indigents were checking it out. It’s no secret that in 2003 before the Iraq invasion, Bush’s Defense Department made The Battle Of Algiers required viewing at the Pentagon. They were hoping to learn from the mistakes the French made by ignoring "hearts & minds."
Pontecorvo would follow The Battle Of Algiers with the underrated, ambitious epic Quemada (Burn). He and star Marlon Brando famously had fights on the set (interestingly it was usually over Pontecorvo's cruel treatment of the Bolivian extras employed by the film). That was the last Pontecorvo film to get an international release; it would be ten years before he would make another and he would mostly stick to political documentary shorts. But others would carry on the mantel of intelligent and challenging European docu-dramas, most notably Costa-Gavras with his two political masterpieces Z and State Of Siege (strangely still not available on DVD). Years later, Irishman Paul Greengrass would carry on Pontecorvo’s docu-style with the stunning Bloody Sunday (he would continue to use elements of the style in a different way directing the later two Bourne films).
In 2004 high-end DVD distributors Criterion would give The Battle Of Algiers the superstar treatment it deserved, with an extraordinary 3-DVD box set crammed with hours of documentaries about Pontecorvo and the film. Now more and more generations will be able to enjoy this film, whether it's to bask in Pontecorvo’s simple filmmaking beauty or as inspiration to fight the power.
_________________________
The Battle Of Algiers was nominated for 3 Oscars: Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Foreign Language Film.
3-Disc, Widescreen version. Arabic & French Language with optional English subtitles.
Special Features include:
- New high-definition transfer, supervised by cinematographer Marcello Gratti
- Theatrical and re-release trailers
- Production Gallery
- Gillo Pontecorvo: The Dictatorship of Truth: a 37 minute documentary
- The Making of The Battle of Algiers
- Directors on The Battle of Algiers featuring Spike Lee, Mira Nair, Julian Schnabel, Steven Soderbergh, and Oliver Stone
- Remembering History (2004)
- Etats d'armes, a 30-minute excerpt from Patrick Rotman's 3-part documentary, L'ennemi intime
- A Case Study, a conversation with former National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism, Richard A. Clarke, former State Department Coordinator for Counterterrorism, Michael A. Sheehan, and Chief of Investigative Projects for ABC News, Christopher E. Isham
- Gillo Pontecorvo's Return to Algiers (1992, 55 minutes)
- A booklet featuring a new essay by film scholar Peter Matthews, a reprinted interview with writer Franco Solinas, brief biographies on the key figures in the French-Algerian War
The Battle Of Algiers was released in the United States as the war in Vietnam was making many Americans sympathetic to the victims of colonialists. The film had a massive impact and scored awards all over the world. It would win the prestigious Silver Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival and strangely, for technical reasons, it would be nominated in 1967 for the Best Foreign Film Oscar and two years later it would get nominated for Best Director and for Best Screenplay (I’m not sure if any other film has received three Oscar nominations in two different years, two years apart).
The film attempts to tell both sides of this dirty little war, the Algerian nationalists fighting for independence, known as the National Liberation Front (FLN) led by a petty criminal, Ali (Brahim Hadjadj). Ali gets radicalized in prison, joins up with the FLN and through his courage and cunning becomes a national symbol of resistance. The brutal French military are led by Colonel Mathieu (Jean Martin) who, though he is strongly pro-French and pro-military, by the end shows strong admiration for the FLN. The Algerians in the film are mostly "non-actors" and are very believable. Interestingly, real life FLN leader Saadi Yacef plays himself, a substantial role - he’s the guy who recruits Ali. He probably could have continued working in films, he’s that good. He is also credited as a producer on the film.
The Battle of Algiers is not boring history class homework; it works as a thriller as well. Like most rebellions and guerrilla wars both sides use brutal tactics to get the job done. In one superbly suspenseful scene the FLN employ women, getting them dolled up to mesh with the Europeans, who then go into the French district to set off bombs. In one shocking scene they blow up a malt shop full of swinging French teenagers and an ice cream parlor full of families. In a sign that Pontecorvo is not looking to completely take the side of the Algerians, the aftermath of those bombings, the gathering of the victims, is shown while Morricone’s elegiac music plays. On the other hand the French military uses extreme torture and the racist French mobs attack Algerians indiscriminately.
The film has often been seen as a "How To Guide" for overthrowing an occupying force. You see the FLN lost the battle for Algiers, but inspired the people outside the city - the mountain and rural people of Algeria - to rise up, and with those numbers the French occupation was hopeless. Over the years the film has continued to stir controversies. In South Africa, Ireland, and Israel - obviously with the occupiers not wanted - their tightly-wound indigents were checking it out. It’s no secret that in 2003 before the Iraq invasion, Bush’s Defense Department made The Battle Of Algiers required viewing at the Pentagon. They were hoping to learn from the mistakes the French made by ignoring "hearts & minds."
Pontecorvo would follow The Battle Of Algiers with the underrated, ambitious epic Quemada (Burn). He and star Marlon Brando famously had fights on the set (interestingly it was usually over Pontecorvo's cruel treatment of the Bolivian extras employed by the film). That was the last Pontecorvo film to get an international release; it would be ten years before he would make another and he would mostly stick to political documentary shorts. But others would carry on the mantel of intelligent and challenging European docu-dramas, most notably Costa-Gavras with his two political masterpieces Z and State Of Siege (strangely still not available on DVD). Years later, Irishman Paul Greengrass would carry on Pontecorvo’s docu-style with the stunning Bloody Sunday (he would continue to use elements of the style in a different way directing the later two Bourne films).
In 2004 high-end DVD distributors Criterion would give The Battle Of Algiers the superstar treatment it deserved, with an extraordinary 3-DVD box set crammed with hours of documentaries about Pontecorvo and the film. Now more and more generations will be able to enjoy this film, whether it's to bask in Pontecorvo’s simple filmmaking beauty or as inspiration to fight the power.
_________________________
The Battle Of Algiers was nominated for 3 Oscars: Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Foreign Language Film.
Product Details
- Cast: Gillo Pontecorvo
- Label: The Criterion Collection
- Release Date: 10/12/2004