Director: Christian Carion
Cast: Diane Kruger, Benno Fürmann
Genre: History, War
Christmas ceases the fire!
Based
on some real events/stories of WWI, Joyeux Noel simply leaves you speechless
with its in-depth and immaculate screenplay. Music plays a vital role
all through the movie, especially the heartwarming Scottish bagpiper and soul-stirring German opera.
Film
starts with an appalling scene of French, German, and Scottish youngsters
being made to recite their anti-enemy lines in cold blood. You witness this horrendous murder
of innocence (nothing graphic, it is all sheer vibes) and tone is set for
the remaining movie.
The
next scene features the dreaded WWI Trenches and starts-off bloodily somewhat
like “Paths of Glory” but from there onwards the film takes a completely different
turn.
Now, the film revolves around the German, French, and Scottish standoff at no man’s
land and this standoff remains in the back drop throughout the movie. Christmas
is around the corner and the soldiers on all sides—at the Western Front—want
this cursed war to end.
A posse of beautifully etched-from-reality characters move the film forward. There
is a French Lieutenant who left behind his pregnant wife in occupied France to
attend the war-call, Lieutenant’s helper/assistant who misses his mother and
her coffee, a Scottish priest who—untouched by politics of faith—actually
preaches about humanity, two Scottish brothers, and two deeply in love German
opera singers separated by war—Anna, Sprink. These and few others form the core of the
movie. Their stories are interwoven—not literally—at an emotional level and by
Christmas Eve combined feelings of all three sides reach the threshold of
something spectacular. What happens now completely defies the purpose/need of
war and, to this day, remains a lesson in morality for us all.
All
three warring sides call a truce and make merry together. This merry making isn’t
just about having fun, you get to feel some of the most complex human emotions
captured elaborately on-screen.
Some
sequences leave you spell-bound, e.g., Sprink coming out singing from German
trenches—ignoring orders and a probable enemy bullets—and being chorused by the bagpipe,
Father Palmer sermon delivered in a language
(Latin) not understood by most, Anna’s soul full song that leaves everyone too
moved to applause, Jonathan writing to his mother on-behalf of his dead
brother, etc.
There
are some genuine fun moments too, like, the football match, the exchange of chocolates
and wines, the alarm clock that mysteriously rings at a particular time, and to
top them all there is a cat (Felix/Nestor) who is addressed by different names among
all the sides.
A
piece from movie:
“General Audebert: You and your men will
rejoin the Verdun sector. You're right about one thing. I don't understand this
war. My corps was the cavalry. You should have made a career of it, like I
said. Today, I'm asked to fight a way where the shovel outweighs the rifle. In
which people swap addresses with the enemy to meet when it's all over. Plus the
cat we found with a note from the Germans, "Good luck, comrades!" I
was ordered to arrest the cat for high treason... until further notice.”
Of
course, the personnel involved in this fraternization were ultimately punished--perhaps glorified too!
And
if all this wasn’t enough—Diane Kruger, beautiful as ever, emits Donna
Reedesque charm!
Indeed
a must watch.
8/10