Fifteen years after the Liberation, ten former members of the French Resistance are invited to the home of Marie-Hélène Dumoufin, code-named Marie-Octobre. The latter reveals she has discovered that, in 1944, one of their group betrayed them to the Nazis, resulting in the break up of the group and the death of its leader, Castille. The purpose of the reunion is to identify the traitor and to ensure he – or she – is punished… —Filmsdefrance.com
Briefly enrolled at the University in his home town of Lille, France, Julien Duvivier dropped out to study acting in Paris. Hired by Andre Antoine’s Theatre Libre, Duvivier was retained as Antoine’s assistant when the latter began directing films in 1916. After apprenticing under several notables of the French cinema, Duvivier was allowed to direct his first feature, Haceldama ou le Prix du Sang (1919). Working steadily and successfully throughout the 1920s, Duvivier emerged as one of the major French film talents of the early talkie era. He was particularly adept at handling multi-storied films, all-star efforts in which several short vignettes were tied together by a central theme. His two biggest European hits, Un Carnet du Bal (1935) and Pepe le Moko (1937), won Duvivier his first Hollywood contract. He made his American bow with a stylized and heavily romanticized biography of Johann Strauss, The Great Waltz (1938). Duvivier’s best-remembered Hollywood efforts of the 1940s were… read more