In 1939, Johan Moritz and his young wife Suzanna celebrate the baptism of their second child in a small Rumanian village. The only person who appears unwilling to join in the festivities is Dobusco, a policeman who secretly covets Moritz’s wife. It is he who arranges to have Moritz arrested and sent to a labour camp, as though he were a Jew. Not long after his arrival at the camp, Moritz escapes and, thanks to the intervention of a Nazi ethnologist, soon finds himself wearing the uniform of an S.S. officer, a uniform that he does not disgrace… —Filmsdefrance.com
Director Henri Verneuil was born Achod Malakian of Armenian parentage on October 15, 1920, in Rodosto, Turkey, and his family fled to France and settled in Marseilles when he was a young child. He later recounted his childhood experience in the novel Mayrig, which he dedicated to his mother and made into a 1991 film with the same name, which was followed by a sequel, 588 Rue Paradis, the following year.
Verneuil enrolled in 1943 at the Ecole Navale des Arts et Métiers at Aix-en-Provence, where he studied engineering. He then pursued a career in journalism, working as the editor-in-chief of the magazine Horizon in 1944-1946 and as a film critic for a Marseilles radio station. In 1947, he had an idea for a short film set in Marseilles and proposed it to the famous comedian Fernandel. The comic liked it, and thus began a long-lasting partnership which produced such popular film hits as Forbidden Fruit, The Sheep Has Five Legs, and The Cow and I read more