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The Army of Crime (2009)
Directed by: Robert Guédiguian
Distributed by: Lorber Films
www. lorberfilms. com
139 minutes
Robert Guédiguian's The Army of Crime opens and closes with different images of the same event: the deportation of 23 members of a communist resistance cell consisting mostly of Armenian, Jewish, Italian, and Spanish immigrants en route to be executed for inciting sabotage and committing a series of assassinations of German soldiers and officers in occupied Paris over the course of 1943. In the first scene, the condemned sit pensively behind the barred windows of a police bus as a narrator recites their foreign-sounding names and asserts each "died for France." Outside the bus, French citizens obliviously stroll and bicycle by enjoying the sunny day. The closing scene contains a similar roll call of the conspirators, as they are loaded onto the bus by Parisian gendarmes. In a voiceover of the last letter he wrote to his French wife Mélinée (Virginie Ledoyen ) who evaded capture, the group's leader, the Armenian poet Missak Manouchian (Simon Abkarian), confirms that he will be executed for enlisting in the "Army of Liberation," thereby contesting the collaborationist Vichy government's vilification of his group as an "army of crime."
The French Communist Party recruited the Manouchian group from the ranks of Vichy's disenfranchised and persecuted. As immigrants, communists, and, in almost half the cases, Jews, the film's protagonists faced detention, deportation, or death after the defeat of the Third Republic, the promulgation of Vichy's repressive policies, and the occupation of two-thirds of France by German troops. The vulnerability of people in these categories increased between 1941 and 1943 as Vichy cracked down on communists following the German invasion of the Soviet Union, rounded up Jewish immigrants for deportation to death camps in Poland, and drafted French laborers to work in Germany. As the tyranny of Vichy became more onerous, Dupont (Horatiu Malaele), the liaison from the French Communist Party, orders Manouchian and his colleagues to launch a coordinated wave of attacks on high profile targets like German troop transports and Nazi elites. These culminated in the murder of SS General Julius Ritter, the director of the German labor conscription program in France. To curry favor with Hitler and deter future insurgencies,...





