Tonight on TV: Unjustly Forgotten, this film delves into the darkest years of French history

Tonight on TV: Unjustly Forgotten, this film delves into the darkest years of French history

On his fifteenth birthday, a family friend reveals a shocking truth to young François that finally allows him to rebuild himself. It then begins to explore a difficult family secret and a history of passion, through the inner journey of this lonely child, who invents his brother and imagines the past of his parents.

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This square is the setting for Claude Miller’s excellent drama Un Secret, a film adaptation of Philippe Grimbert’s novel of the same name, which notably won the Prix Goncourt des Lycées. Released in cinemas in 2007, this film, unjustly forgotten, plunges the audience into the heart of the darkest years of French history.

A moving intimate tragedy

working around memory Secret, which moves between the past and the present, will captivate you. It is a popular, daring, exciting and necessary intimate tragedy, led by the wonderful film couple of Patrick Bruel and Cécile de France.

“When we talk about the victims of Nazism, we often get the impression that these people were not like others: that they did not experience love stories, that they did not know passions.– says the director Claude Millerwhich touched deeply on the theme of the film. “I was born in 1942. There are not many survivors in my family: most of my uncles, aunts and grandmothers did not return from the concentration camps. As a child, and then as a teenager, this traumatic and anxious story bothered me. – I had fears and phobias.

“I respect my family and its history”

“It’s strange that it’s a subject I haven’t talked about in my previous films.”adds the filmmaker to whom we owe Garde à vue, L’Effrontée and La Petite Thief in particular. “I felt that the adaptation of the novel Philip Grimbert It might be an opportunity to honor my family and its history. Especially since we both come from the same social background, neither bourgeois nor proletarian. Our parents were petty bourgeois, merchants and Ashkenazi Jews.”

Secret It was a huge success in French theaters, where almost 1.7 million viewers attended. It’s up to you, tonight, in your living room, to be captivated by this exciting story…

Tonight at Arte at 20:55.

Patrick Bruel, career interview:

Source: Allocine

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