The Carabineers

(Redirected from Les Carabiniers)

The Carabineers (French: Les Carabiniers) is a 1963 French war comedy-drama film by French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard.

The Carabineers
Directed byJean-Luc Godard
Written byJean-Luc Godard
Jean Gruault
Roberto Rossellini
Based onI due carabinieri
play
by Beniamino Joppolo
Produced byGeorges de Beauregard
Carlo Ponti
StarringMarino Masè
CinematographyRaoul Coutard
Edited byAgnès Guillemot
Lila Lakshmanan
Music byPhilippe Arthuys
Production
company
Distributed byCocinor
Release date
  • 1963 (1963)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget$104,000[1]

Plot

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Les Carabiniers (1963) tells the story of two poor men called to serve in battle, lured by promises of the world's riches. Ulysses (Marino Mase) and Michelangelo (Albert Juross) receive letters from the king of their fictional country that allow them to have complete freedom from consequence while fighting in the war, in return for anything they desire—swimming pools, Maseratis, women—at the enemy's expense.

Their wives, Venus and Cleopatra (Catherine Ribeiro and Genevieve Galea) encourage them to fight when they hear about the riches. The two men leave and cross the battlefields and villages, destroying and pillaging as they wish. The pair's exploits are recounted through postcards sent to their wives, telling tales of the horrors of battle. The previously idealistic idea that the men have of war disintegrates, as they are still poor and now wounded. They return home with a suitcase full of postcards of the splendors of the world that they have fought for, and are told by army officials that they must wait until the war ends to receive their pay.

One day, the sky explodes with sparks, and the couples race into town, believing that the war has ended. Ulysses and Michelangelo are informed by their superiors that their king has lost the war, and that all of the war criminals must be punished. The two men are then shot for their crimes.

Cast

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Critical responses

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Writing about the film in Harpers Magazine in 1969, the critic Pauline Kael declared it, "hell to watch for the first hour...exciting to think about after because its one good sequence, the long picture-postcard sequence near the end, is so incredible and so brilliantly prolonged. The picture has been crawling and stumbling along and then it climbs a high wire and walks it and keeps walking it until we're almost dizzy from admiration. The tight rope is rarely stretched so high in movies..."[2]

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The renowned author and critic Susan Sontag referenced the film in her 1977 collection of essays On Photography. With respect to the "two sluggish lumpen-peasants" returning home bearing postcards of the treasures of the world instead of tangible treasure, Sontag noted that "Godard's gag vividly parodies the equivocal magic of the photographic image."[3]

References

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  1. ^ Caute, David (1994). Joseph Losey. Oxford University Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-19-506410-0.
  2. ^ Pauline Kael, writing in her essay "Trash, Art, and the Movies" from Harpers Magazine, February 1969, reprinted in her collection Going Steady ISBN 0-7145-2976-1
  3. ^ Sontag, Susan (1977) "On Photography", Penguin, London
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