Au Revoir, Les Enfants Movie Review
Au Revoir, Les Enfants Review
"Au Revoir, Les Enfants" Overview

Rating: NR
1987
Cast and Crew
Director : Louis MalleProducer : Louis Malle
Screenwiter : Louis Malle
Starring : Gaspard Manesse,Raphael Fejtö,Francine Racette,Stanislas Carré de Malberg,Philippe Morier-Genoud
Louis Malle made a lot of films about coming of age and losing childish
innocence over his storied career. But none is so powerful as Au Revoir, Les
Enfants, Malle's autobiographical tale of the time he spent in a Franch
boarding school during the German occupation of his homeland.
The tale revolves around a new student, Jean Bonnet, and one of the other lads
there, the pint-sized Julien Quentin. It's obvious to everyone that Bonnet
isn't like the other kids -- he has curly hair and doesn't eat pork -- and soon
enough the fact that he's Jewish is an open secret among the kids. The Catholic
priests have taken him in as an act of charity, along with a few other Jewish
boys living under pseudonyms now that their parents have vanished. Think of it
as The Diary of Anne Frank by way of Dead Poets Society.
The Nazis make surprise inspections and eventually the subterfuge comes to an
end, but not before Quentin's life is changed by the mild-mannered Bonnet.
Quentin is at first a prototypical member of the French upper crust, spoiled
and kept swimming in jam despite the horrors of the war raging around him. He
hasn't a care in the world, and his exposure to a Jew is about as foreign to
him as exposure to a camel.
But Bonnet has a subtle, yet powerful, effect on Quentin. So subtle that it's
difficult to explain in words, really. Bonnet is gentle where Quentin is crass.
Bonnet is happy to be in such a place as the prestigious school. Quentin takes
everything for granted.
It's a bit odd, then, that Malle waited until 1987, really the twilight of his
career, to make a film that obviously meant so much to him. It's unquestionably
his most personal film and arguably his most powerful. But perhaps time away
from World War II is what he needed to gain some perspective on his life, and
on events that unfolded over 40 years earlier. A trip through the extras on the
Criterion box set (see below) may shed some more insight on the matter.
Meanwhile, you can simply enjoy the film as an example of stellar filmmaking,
on its own merits.
Aka Goodbye, Children.
Now part of a four-disc Criterion set of three Malle films, including Murmur of
the Heart and Lacombe, Lucien, plus a fourth disc of extras. Bonus materials
range from interviews with Malle actors, interviews with Malle himself, behind
the scenes footage, and more, including The Immigrant, the 1917 Chaplin short
film that appeared in Les Enfants.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



