Deserter (2002)
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4 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
DESERTER is an excellent micro-budget film ($3.5 million apparently) which does an awful lot with very little. Based on Simon Murray's famous memoir "Legionnaire" - the film was retitled to avoid confusion with a JCVD film of the same name - it's about a jilted Englishman in the 1960s who joins the French Foreign Legion and fights with them in Algeria, before facing a moral crisis. It's suitably authentic in the details and mood of life in the Legion, although some of the props (tanks, trucks) are inaccurate. The tiny budget often works in the film's favour; the actors (who do very well) are the right age (early 20s) for once because older stars were too pricey; the battle scenes have a documentary vividness because they can't afford silly lenses or hyper-editing (the gasoline explosions are stupid though); and the story is short and sharp because there wasn't the money for unnecessary subplots. Generally it gives a good overview of the Algerian War, from a multitude of perspectives: an Englishman, the French military, the French colonists and the Arabs. Life in the FFL - the sun-scorched marches, the brutal punishments, the ferocious discipline, the primeval initiation ceremony, the intense camaraderie and the brutal if effective counter-insurgency tactics - is extremely well conveyed. Occasionally it threatens to veer into political correctness or melodrama but it always recovers in time. Overall, a small, good film on an interesting subject. I wish there were more like it.
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