Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

In the Midst of Life

Au coeur de la vie

France

1963

95 Min
Black and White
French
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Robert Enrico

PROD Paul de Roubaix, Robert Hossein

SCR Robert Enrico, Ambrose Bierce

DP Jean Boffety

CAST Roger Jacquet, Anne Cornaly, Stéphane Fey, Pierre Boffety, Frédérique Ruchaud, François Frankiel, Eric Frankiel

ED Catherine Delmas

PROD DES Frédéric de Pasquale

MUSIC Henri Lanoë

SOUND Henri Lanoë

Synopsis

Though Robert Enrico would spend most of his career directing French crime films, he remains best known for his short film, An Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge (aka La rivière du hibou), which was included as an episode of the Twilight Zone. La rivière du hibou is actually a part of a trilogy of films that Enrico made about the American Civil War, all based on stories by Ambrose Bierce. Using dialogue and voice-over economically, all three stories rely heavily on the rural landscape, and how it is transformed through war and the psychological state of the protagonist, to convey their ideas.

Though the most famous, La rivière du hibou, is actually the middle story in the trilogy. The first is Chickamauga, named after a battle from the American civil war which marked a very significant Union defeat. This particular film is told from the perspective of a deaf and mute child, who wanders off the day of the battle. When he eventually stumbles upon the aftermath of the fight, it is presented as a surreal dream.

La rivière du hibou remains the most famous of Enrico’s oeuvre. It is the tale of a man who is about to be hanged, and at the last moment, the rope magically breaks and he plunges into the water, and manages to escape.

The final film in the trilogy, The Mockingbird, further explores the psychological of the soldier, as a man tries to come to terms with the knowledge that he killed a man. While standing the evening guard one night in the woods by his camp, Pvt. Greyrock slowly becomes aware that someone else is in the forest with him. —houseofmirthandmovies.com

Director

Original

Robert Enrico

French director of La Riviere du Hibou, a short film with a twist in the tail

ROBERT ENRICO, who has died aged 69, owed such fame as he enjoyed beyond his native France to a single short film, running only 27 minutes, which he made in 1961.

La Riviere du Hibou, shot in black and white and set in the American Civil War, claimed top prize at a festival of short films in Tours in 1961, went on to take the Palme d’Or at Cannes the following year, and two years later won an Oscar as best short film under the title Incident at Owl Creek. The source was a story by the 19th-century American writer Ambrose Bierce, originally called An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge. Few short films have taken the world by storm quite so quickly and spectacularly. Its appeal lay in the skill with which Enrico concealed the twist in the tail.

On a rickety bridge built across a river, a civilian is strung up for summary execution for partisan activities. At the last minute, the rope breaks;… read more

Wall

Displaying 0 wall posts.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 3 of 3 fans.

Lists

Displaying 3 of 3 lists.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.