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The Best DVD of the Year
By Nathan Cone
This year has seen some terrific releases on DVD, but none is better
than the Criterion
Collection's
three disc set, "The
Battle of Algiers." First released in 1966, "The
Battle of Algiers" was reissued in theaters across the country in
2004. It enjoyed a brief run in San Antonio in May 2004. The film's 2004
distributor, Rialto, told me that it didn't do too well in San Antonio so
it was pulled after one week. That's too bad, but now the movie can be
experienced at home, with nearly five hours of documentary and
supplemental material, not only about the film, but also about the
French-Algerian conflict of the 1950s.
"The Battle of Algiers" depicts, in near documentary fashion,
the major events of the urban conflict that arose in Algiers as France
attempted to dismantle the underground Front de Libération Nationale (FLN).
The FLN used terrorist tactics like bombings and assassination as part of
their effort to win Algerian independence. On the other side of the
conflict, the French sent in paratroopers to occupy the city of Algiers,
and used torture and threat of execution to extract information from
suspected members of the FLN.
Italian director Gillo Pontecorvo directed "The Battle of
Algiers," casting non-actors in nearly all the major roles. With the
help of producer (and former FLN military leader) Saadi Yacef, he also
re-created the Battle of Algiers in the very same places it had taken
place just a few years prior. Yacef's participation also wasn't limited to
his role as producer. He played El-hadi Jafar, a fictionalized version of
his own self, in the film. Being on the set every day helped him advise
Pontecorvo to keep, in his words, a more romanticized version of the story
from developing.
Romanticized is one word that cannot be used to describe "The
Battle of Algiers." In one of the special features on this DVD set,
director Steven Soderbergh talks about the influence this film had on his
own "Traffic," and remarks that you should know what you're in
for when "The Battle of Algiers" opens with a scene of a man
being tortured. The killings in the movie, whether by gun, guillotine, or
bomb, are not depicted in an overly graphic fashion, but they are still
shocking.
The only trained actor to appear in "The Battle of Algiers"
is Jean Martin. Martin plays Colonel Matthieu, sent in to lead a squadron
of French Paratroopers sent in to Algiers to take control of the
situation. Here, Pontecorvo takes poetic license, for Col. Matthieu is a
composite character of three or four real-life French military leaders.
Cold and calculating, Matthieu, who fought in the French Resistance
himself, respects his enemy while doing his job to eradicate them.
Matthieu also understands what the politicians in France do not: you
cannot stop history from happening. It seems to me that Matthieu knows
that while he and his men may win the battle of Algiers, they may lose the
war. "Should France remain in Algeria?" he asks reporters at a
news conference. "If the answer is yes, then you must accept the
consequences."
Although it's clear that Pontecorvo's point in "The Battle of
Algiers" is that colonialism is bad, the FLN are not the heroes of
this story. In fact, neither side in this "battle" is damned, be
they the French paratroopers or the members of the FLN. We're shown scenes
of torture by the French, but also FLN bombings in public places. Neither
of these actions is heroic, but they are unfortunately a part of modern
warfare and insurgencies. One scene stands out as a chilling
representation of Pontecorvo's acknowledgement of the horror of urban
warfare. A female member of the FLN, after cutting her hair and donning
makeup to appear more European, is sitting at a café in the European part
of Algiers, where she will soon leave behind her purse with a bomb inside.
As a traditional percussive Algerian melody thrum-thrums on the
soundtrack, she scans the room, and the camera catches the faces of men,
women, and children enjoying their coffee and ice cream. Many of them will
most certainly die after she leaves the café. It's a haunting scene that
will stay with me for a long time.
Composer Ennio Morricone's
score works beautifully in the picture. Director Gillo Pontecorvo had an
eight-note phrase he felt would work perfectly, and Morricone takes this
motif and works variations on it throughout the movie. For scenes
depicting the aftermath of FLN bombings or French assaults, Morricone uses
a melancholy melody based on a Bach chorale. It's a very moving and
stirring score.
The Criterion DVD edition of "The Battle of Algiers" includes
many special features that enhance one's viewing of the Pontecorvo film.
Disc two is devoted to documentaries on the making of the film and
commentary from contemporary directors. A 1992 feature "Gillo
Pontecorvo: The Dictatorship of Truth" follows the director's career
from his Holocaust drama "Kapo," through "The Battle of
Algiers," and on to his final two films (so far), "Burn!"
and "Ogro." This documentary focuses on Pontecorvo's approach to
extreme realism in his films. Another feature on disc two is the 51-minute
long "Making of 'The Battle of Algiers,'" featuring interviews
with Pontecorvo, Morricone, the film's editor, Mario Morra, and
cinematographer Marcello Gatti, whose contributions to the film were vital
to its success.
Disc three of the set is devoted to features that help one to better
understand the French-Algerian conflict, beginning with "Remembering
History," an hour-plus documentary that goes back some 150 years
before the Battle of Algiers, and sheds further light on what was
happening outside the urban battle depicted in the film. Revealed in the
documentary but not in Pontecorvo's film (since it concentrates on
Algiers' urban conflict alone) are the tit-for-tat massacres near
Philippeville in August 1955, or further conflicts in the countryside. And
after Algeria won its independence, many Muslims who were French
sympathizers were executed. The documentary benefits from the
participation of several historians, as well as Saadi Yacef and former FLN
member Zohra Drif-Bitat. Yacef, for the most part, is unrepentant when
discussing the bombings the FLN carried out.
"États d'armes" is a 28-minute long interview with two
former French military officers, who, like Yacef, discuss their roles in
the combat matter-of-factly, until the question of torture and execution
is brought up. Then their answers get a little cagey.
Another feature might interest our own intelligence community. ABC News
investigative chief Christopher Isham moderates a conversation with former
national counterterrorism coordinator Richard Clarke, and former State
Department counterterrorism coordinator Michael Sheehan. Both have words
of caution for our own administration and its policy in Iraq. Clarke uses
a phrase that was bandied about some 30 years ago, and became the title of
an Oscar-winning documentary about the Vietnam War. In modern warfare, you
must win not only the battle against your enemy's forces, but the
"hearts and minds" of the enemy's population to be truly
victorious.
The set also includes an hour-long "Return to Algiers" by
Gillo Pontecorvo, and an extensive accompanying booklet that helpfully
identifies the major participants in the French-Algerian War.
Screened
by the Pentagon in 2003, "The Battle of Algiers"
should be required viewing for film buffs, but it's also an invaluable
resource for teachers and students of world history. Much of what is
happening in the world today parallels this film. With the added extra
features, "The
Battle of Algiers" is the best DVD set of 2004.
1/4/05
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