Le vieux fusil

Le vieux fusil

Theatrial poster
Directed by Robert Enrico
Written by Robert Enrico
Pascal Jardin
Claude Veillot
Starring Philippe Noiret
Romy Schneider
Music by François de Roubaix
Cinematography Etienne Becker
Editing by Ava Zora
Eva Zora
Studio Les Productions Artistes Associés
Mercure Productions
TIT Filmproduktion GmbH
Distributed by Mercure Productions
Release date(s) 22 August 1975 (France)
29 June 1976 (USA; New York City)
Running time 103 min.
Country  France
 West Germany
Language French

Le vieux fusil (US title: The Old Gun aka Vengeance One by One) is a 1975 French film directed by Robert Enrico, and starring Philippe Noiret, Romy Schneider and Jean Bouise. It won the 1976 César Award for Best Film, Best Actor and Best Music, and was nominated for best director, supporting actor, writing, cinematography, editing and sound. The film is based on the Massacre of Oradour-sur-Glane in 1944.

Contents

Plot

In Montauban in 1944, during the German occupation of France, Julien Dandieu is an ageing, embittered surgeon in the local hospital. Frightened by the German army entering Montauban, Dandieu asks his friend Francois to drive his wife and his daughter to the remote village where he owns a chateau. One week later, Dandieu sets off to meet them for the weekend, but the Germans have now occupied the village. His daughter and wife, who was raped, were both killed by the cruel Nazi soldiers who shot his young daughter and burned his wife with a flame-thrower. Dandieu decides to kill as many Germans as possible to avenge his family. He takes an old gun he used as a child while hunting with his father and starts to kill them one by one. They begin to think they are surrounded by many partisans and don't realise that he is, in fact, the only one, taking advantage of his knowledge of the secret passages within the chateau. He beats one of the fascists to death, shoots some of them and lets two of them drown in the well, where he closes the grid, preventing them from escaping. With no more cartridges for the rifle, he finds the flame-thrower which killed his beloved wife and uses it to kill the Nazi officer as he is about to commit suicide standing in front of the 2-way mirror. The film ends with the liberation of the place by the French Resistance.

Cast

See also

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Award Created
César Award for Best Film
1976
Succeeded by
Monsieur Klein