Directed by Marcel Ophüls • Documentary • With Pierre Mendès France, Robert Anthony Eden • 1971 • 133 minutes
Newly Restored in HD! Part 1 of 2
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 Ophüls interviewed the residents of Clermont-Ferrand who remembered the occupation, as well as government officials, writers, farmers, artists, and German veterans. Here, in their own words, is the story of how ordinary citizens and leaders alike behaved under military siege. Originally refused by French TV, the film garnered international success and acclaim – including an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary – while shattering the myth of an undivided and universally resistant France under the Vichy government. A triumph of on-the-ground filmmaking, THE SORROW AND THE PITY remains gripping, appalling, and exhilarating for its transparent view upon humanity.
“Through its scale, intelligence, wit, imaginative organisation and polemical thrust, it changed the face of the documentary forever.” – Phillip French, The Guardian
Directed by Marcel Ophüls • Documentary • With Pierre Mendès France, Robert Anthony Eden • 1971 • 138 minutes
Newly Restored in HD! Part 2 of 2
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 ...
Directed by Frederic Choffat and Vincent Lowy • Documentary • With Marcel Ophuls, Jean-Luc Godard • 2010 • 44 minutes
In 2009, in a small theater in Geneva, Switzerland, the film directors Marcel Ophuls and Jean-Luc Godard met for an unusual, surprisngly intimate and sometimes contentious dialog...