3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Poor sound, August 24, 2007
This review is from: Prisoner of Honor (DVD)
This DVD has poor sound reproduction, and does not have subtitles in English to help make out what is being said.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
C'est Bon., May 16, 2010
This review is from: Prisoner of Honor (DVD)
'Prisoner of Honor' is Ken Russell's gloomy take on The Dreyfus Affair - a Military secrets scandal which dangerously divided France at the end of the 19th Century.
Made for Cable by HBO and assembling a magnificent one-off cast, Russell dons his serious(-ish) cap for a delve into the foggy, treacherous worlds of counter-espionage and institutionalised racism.
Richard Dreyfuss is excellent as Picquart, an anti-Semitic staff colonel assigned to confirm the guilt of Alfred Dreyfus - a Jewish Artillery officer consigned to Devil's Island for allegedly selling secrets to the nasty Prussians.
Depending on your point of view, Russell's relatively unfussy telling of this complicated tale, is either tragically disappointing or a minor triumph. There's definite Russell impetuosity to some of the rioting crowd sequences, and the bastardisation of the La Marseillaise during a sleazy cabaret scene is typical of his bludgeoning naivety when it comes to anything political, but the rest is pretty subdued.
Without question, 'POH' is exquisite to look at; Russell and cinematographer Mike Southon have fashioned a ravishing vista with which to exhibit all the murky chicanery and dishonour in eye-caressing focus. It looks like a complete location shoot (even though it can't be), and no-one does top-hat-and-tails quite like Russell; the extras - as usual - look splendid.
Supporting cast includes Oliver Reed, almost sedate as a scheming General, who initially supports Piquart before patriotically betraying him; and Colin Firth is good and sweaty as a slippery Major, lusting after Piquart's position.
Russell is in a no-win situation with a film like this. His critics laud his restraint while his fans bemoan his lack of excess (a similar fate befell his BBC adaptation of Lawrence's 'Lady Chatterley's Lover.' A painful example of a usually uncompromising, mono-directional phenomenon falling between two stools), but I think 'POH' stands up.
Ron Hutchinson's script cries out for both shearing and sharpening - two elements where Russell expertly obliges.
'POH' is good without ever approaching genius; and while it's quite obviously a character driven actors piece, it certainly looks and feels like a Ken Russell film - albeit a minor one - and is therefore worthy of at least one attentive viewing.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent film on a significant historic event, June 17, 2011
This review is from: Prisoner of Honor (DVD)
I have nothing but high praise for this excellent film. It is superb. The Dreyfuss Affair was as disruptive to French society as Watergate was to the USA. It was an event that caused polarization of the entire French population and possibly hastened World War I. Needless to say such an event had legal, societal, historic, cultural and national complexities and nuance. However director Ken Russell using a screen play by Ron Hutchinson was able to produce a 90 minute film on this incredible episode in world history with accuracy and focus. Barbara Tuchman has an excellent short 50 page chapter on the Dreyfus Affair in her book, The Proud Tower. This film was able to tell a compelling and complex story and Ken Russell's use of odd details helps propel the story forward. The film deals with anti-Semitism in an objective manner, neither spending too much time on how terrible prejudice is for a society nor spending too much time building sympathy for Dreyfuss and his family. In fact one strength of the film is that the head of Counter-Intelligence, George Picquart, is depicted as having some of the same anti-Semitic prejudices of his other countrymen. Richard Dreyfus is excellent as he plays a complex man of many conflicting convictions whose search for truth lays bare a terrible injustice. Oliver Reed, Peter Firth, Jeremy Kemp, Brian Blessed, and Peter Vaughn were all top rate. They had to slightly over-dramatize since the storyline is complex. However, like in Watergate, the cover up of the crime became more significant than the crime itself. The cover-up of the injustice committed against Dreyfuss caused a national scandal and undermined the authority of the French military, a column of French society at the time. The film shows how prejudice may saturate a society so that prejudice is the social norm. It is important to remember, as Tuchman points out, that France had become a Republic and that citizens could now rise in the ranks of the military and public services through their own merits rather than family rank. Dreyfuss had risen in the ranks of the military as a bright dedicated Jewish officer. The false accusations against him undermined those societal forces that supported merit rather than birth rank as the route to success. Thus even though he was Jewish, many progressives supported his cause against the more conservative forces. There are many courtroom scenes, including the scenes where Emil Zola, France's most famous novelist, is sued by the top military brass for slander for publicizing the injustices imposed on Dreyfuss. If someone were to ask me "What was the Dreyfus affair all about?" I think I would refer them to this film as possibly the best 90 minute explanation of this historic event.
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