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Forbidden Games - Criterion Collection

Forbidden Games - Criterion Collection

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Director: Ren Clment
Actors: Georges Poujouly, Brigitte Fossey, Amde, Laurence Badie, Madeleine Barbule
Studio: Criterion
Category: DVD

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $19.49
You Save: $10.46 (35%)



New (35) Used (9) from $15.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 27 reviews
Sales Rank: 17671

Format: Black & White, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Ntsc
Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Original Language)
Rating: Unrated
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 86
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: 230
UPC: 037429209622
EAN: 0037429209622
ASIN: B000BC8SWE

Theatrical Release Date: December 8, 1952
Release Date: December 6, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Description
A timeless evocation of the loss of innocence, Ren Clment's devastating Forbidden Games tells the story of a young orphan and her friend forced to fend for themselves in World War II France. Featuring brilliant performances from its child stars, the film won the 1952 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film and remains a singular, breathtaking cinematic achievement.


Customer Reviews:   Read 22 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Under the Eyes of the Owl   August 15, 2008
Forbidden Games is a sad tale of war. A little girl (Brigitte Fossey) witnesses her family killed while fleeing the bombs of WWII. Even her dog is killed, but she carries him with her as she wanders away. She stumbles upon a rural family with a young boy named Michel (Georges Poujouly). The Dolle's take her in, and Michel becomes her closest friend. Paulette has an obsession with death, and when she buries her dog, she insists that other animals accompany him near his grave so that he will not be lonely. Michel does his best to oblige her but cannot easily find crosses to decorate the graves. Paulette becomes his eyes and requests every pretty cross that she sees.

A moving film with two wonderful child actors, Forbidden Games is depressing but very well done. It is a strong arguement against war and a plea for war orphans everywhere. Director Ren Clment utilizes an untraditional way of opening and closing his film. Although the story follows a logical progression, it opens abruptly and ends without the story being concluded. In this way, we are presented with a slice of life and are able to relate better to the story and to the characters.

In spite of the grim subject, there are a few moments of humor, even in spite of the seriousness of the actions. Laughter in times of crisis is often therapeutic, and Clment gives us a few of those moments.



5 out of 5 stars Sad   April 7, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

When I was a kid in the sixties this movie appeared on TV; I was not allowed to watch it, I guess because of my parents' then traditional catholicism; I just saw at that time a glimpse of the two children with the crosses. Those images, the soundtrack which my much older sister listened to almost constantly, and the name of the movie have haunted me ever since, forty years ago.
I recently bought the DVD and I was not disappointed. The movie is so lyrical, the children's acting so heartfelt, the inevitability of loss so heartbreaking. All the rituals we invent to alleviate loss, the images seem to suggest, are an illusion at best. The somber cast of WWII in Europe is just a scratch beneath the buccolic setting, reminding me that that senseless evil is still as close to all of us as it ever has been.



5 out of 5 stars A Remarkable, Wonderful Foreign Classic   April 5, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

OK, I'm going to take a short break from my mocking open distain for "things French", to comment on this classic film.

"Forbidden Games" is stunning, moving, sensitive, thoughtful -- and an important time capsule from post WWII France. The soundtrack dialogue is French, with difficult to follow, fast moving English subtitles.

(I'll also break from my habit of not directly discussing plot). This film opens with a rural road mass refugee scene, as crowds flee Paris. The throng is strafed by a German aircraft. A family of three is caught in the open and the mother and father and a five year old girl's small dog are killed. The girl picks up the dog and wanders away, ignored by the panicking crowd.

The little girl, Paulette (played by Brigette Fossey) is adopted by a rustic family living in a community of rustics. An 11 year old boy in the family, Michel (played by Georges Poujouly), bonds with the girl, and they discuss what happens to dead parents and dogs. The girl has no religious training, and is quickly, and very innocently, picking up bits and pieces.

Paulette buries her dog, and Michel helps console her by finding other dead animals and they create a clandestine pet cemetary. Michel then begins stealing crosses (from the church, graveyard, etc) to honor the dead in the pet cemetary. Wartime disruption and poverty goes on in the families and community around them. There is an inter-family disapproved romance, and instances of military desertion . . . hey, this is France! (sorry).

Director Rene Clement wrung an absolutely stunning performance out of the child actors. The violated innocence is convincing. So is the poor village environment.

The theft of the crosses brings the attention of the community and the authorities . . . and I'll stop there. No need to give away an ending. A bittersweet classic foreign film that is wonderful viewing. Unusual and very nicely done. This film was intelligently written & directed, and there are layers of symbolism beneath the surface plot. Will make for enjoyable re-viewing. Belongs in your collection.




5 out of 5 stars Forbidden Games   June 25, 2007
The stark simplicity of Rene Clement's masterpiece makes it one of the more eloquent anti-war statements ever put on film. In a world gone mad, Michel and Paulette respond with an act of quiet kindness, which is their way of making sense of what is happening. While clinging to childhood via their secret game, the two unwittingly reflect humanity's noblest traits in its darkest hour. Haunting and profound.


5 out of 5 stars A Superb Film   March 15, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

"Forbidden Games" was never a film I wanted to see. I didn't know anything about it, but I saw it on video store shelves a couple times. This movie is a perfect example of why a person shouldn't judge a "book" by its cover. The cover is, usually, the first thing someone notices about a film and the cover of "Forbidden Games" doesn't scream "see me!" Too bad, because it is (as you probably already know) a masterpiece. Opening in France, in 1940, during the German blitzkrieg of Paris;
We watch as hundreds of people flee for the countryside. Then we see a young girl named Paulette, whose parents are hurrying her along. She's too preoccupied with getting her dog Jock. As planes fly overhead, Paulette chases after the dog, which leads to the death of both her parents and her dog. After the corpse of the dog is thrown into a river, Paulette retrieves it and wanders into the countryside home of the Dolle family. There she meets a child a few years older than her named Michel, whose family has enough problems that they are hesitant to bring in a child. After all, Michel's brother Georges was just kicked by a horse and lies in bed dying. But the father of the Dolle family allows Paulette to stay. The title "Forbidden Games" refers to what begins to happen midway through the film between Michel and Paulette. After burying her dog, Paulette becomes obsessed with burying other animals around him. She enlists Michel's help in doing so, as well as retrieving crosses for the burial sites no matter how he gets them. Death is the theme of the film and it is a theme that is hammered into the ground. Anyone who watches this film should realize that it's a great film, but that doesn't always mean you'll enjoy it. After all, a lot of great films aren't necessarily entertaining. This film, however, is entertaining. If Jean Renoir's "Grand Illusion" was the most important film about World War I, than "Forbidden Games" is easily the most important about World War II. It's a wonderful, beautifully photographed, and superbly acted film that is largely unseen today. I urge you, if you're reading this and have not seen the film, to go see it.

GRADE: A


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