The Movie Book

(Barry) #1

184 THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS


T


here are
many ways
to tackle war
and political strife in
fiction. Filmmakers
can approach it from a
humanist perspective,
following civilians as
the external conflict
escalates around them,
or follow rank-and-file
soldiers as they carry out
their duties, and examine
the moral crises they face
in doing so.
The majority of movies
about conflict tend to
take one of these two
perspectives. The Battle
of Algiers, however,
adopts a journalistic
perspective instead to
follow Algeria’s attempts
to gain independence from
the French. That is to say,
it approaches the conflict
forensically, its narrative
following the progression of
significant events. While it does
have prominent figures in its
narrative, particularly Ali La Pointe,
one of the leaders of the Algerian
resistance, it is not the story of
any one individual. The movie is,

as the title suggests, the story
of the Battle of Algiers. Director
Gillo Pontecorvo’s camera mimics
that of a photojournalist on the
streets, capturing events from
an objective remove.

IN CONTEXT


GENRE
War, political

DIRECTOR
Gillo Pontecorvo

WRITERS
Gillo Pontecorvo,
Franco Solinas

STARS
Jean Martin, Brahim
Hadjadj, Yacef Saadi

BEFORE
1960 Pontecorvo’s movie Kapò
is one of the first attempts
to depict the horrors of the
Holocaust on screen.

AFTER
1969 Pontecorvo’s Burn! stars
Marlon Brando as a British
agent who manipulates a
slave revolt on a Caribbean
island to pervert it in the
interests of big business.

2006 Ken Loach’s The Wind
that Shakes the Barley tells the
story of Republican fighters in
the Irish War of Independence.

With its use of documentary-style
filming techniques, the movie’s
large crowd scenes resemble
real newsreel footage.

00:10
While in prison in 1954,
Ali La Pointe witnesses the
execution of a man who
shouts out independence
slogans. Five months later,
he joins the FLN.

00:36
In response to
the killing of police
by the FLN, the
police chief plants
a bomb in the
casbah, which kills
a number of children.

00:55
Colonel Mathieu arrives
in Algiers to take charge
of the operation against the
FLN. He plans Operation
Champagne to take place
during a strike called by
the FLN.

01:44
The FLN leader
Djafar surrenders.
However, Ali La
Pointe is still free.

00:18
It is 1956 and the FLN
announces bans on alcohol,
drugs, and prostitution. It
enforces the new rules
within the casbah.

00:41
Following the bombing of the
casbah, three FLN women in Western
clothing plant bombs. One is in a bar,
another at a disco, and a third at the
airport. They kill scores of people.

00:00 00:20 00:40 01:00 01:20 01:40 02:02

01:32
At a press conference,
Mathieu praises FLN
fighters, including arrested
leader Ben M’Hidi, for
their commitment
to their cause.

01:52
After Ali La Pointe refuses to
surrender, the Colonel blows up
the house he is hiding in. He
declares that “the head of the
tapeworm has been destroyed.”

Minute by minute

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