Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 11 de jul. de 2022 · All films relate to their place and time, but some are nearly incomprehensible out of context. That’s the case with Marcel Ophuls’s great 1969 documentary, “The Sorrow and the Pity,” even ...

  2. The Sorrow and the Pity - Apple TV. Available on Prime Video, iTunes. From its first release at an underground theater in Paris, this account of France's occupation under Nazi regime has been acclaimed as one of the most moving and influential films ever made. Director Marcel Ophuls interviewed the residents of Clermont-Ferrand who remembered ...

  3. 20 de ene. de 2021 · It is the highest praise I can offer The Sorrow and the Pity to say that in it misfortune is fairly portrayed. One is left with the ques­tion of whether (and how much) the French really have been marked — in the long run — by the Nazi experience. New Yorker, March 25, 1972. More: Marcel Ophüls, Movie reviews, Pauline Kael, The Sorrow and ...

  4. 14 de may. de 2004 · The Sorrow And The Pity (Le Chagrin Et La Pitié) (1971) Infamous as the torturously long documentary that Woody Allen insists on taking Diane Keaton to in Annie Hall, The Sorrow And The Pity ...

  5. As the 2021 NYFF comes to a close, a look back half a century to the films, and the posters for the films, that made up the 1971 edition. A two-part documentary film by Marcel Ophüls that concerns the French Resistance and collaboration with the Vichy government and Nazi Germany during World War II.

  6. Nothing Can't Be Undone by a HotPot. “The Sorrow and the Pity” leaves you with the peculiar feeling of having spent a good deal of time, over the years, in the small French city of Clermont-Ferrand. You know the inhabitants by name, and quite a few of their faces. You even knew some of their secrets, and what they privately think of one ...

  7. An in-depth exploration of the various reactions by the French people to the Vichy government's acceptance of Nazi invasion. From 1940 to 1944, France's Vichy government collaborated with Nazi Germany. Marcel Ophüls mixes archival footage with 1969 interviews of a German officer and of collaborators and resistance fighters from Clermont-Ferrand.