Review of De Gaulle

De Gaulle (2020)
7/10
A good biographical film about Charles De Gaulle focusing on his years at the beginning of WWII
21 October 2023
Biopic that tells, in a dramatic way, how the French general Charles de Gaulle fought the advance of Nazi Germany during WWII, separating from his family and exiling himself to London to negotiate an alliance with Churchill. The film begins in May 1940 in Abbeville. The German army gains ground in France, but Colonel de Gaulle does not give up. Charles opts to continue the fight and ally himself with the British army against a defeatist French government that, once President Reynaud resigns, is chaired by Petain. Promoted to general for his heroic and unwavering speech, he advises his wife Yvonne to flee Colombey with her children, including a disabled girl. Along the way, Charles de Gaulle is confronted with the military and political collapse of France in 1940. Charles de Gaulle lives in London while his his wife Yvonne attempts join him, but she finds herself with her three children on the road of the exodus.

Efficiently directed by Gabriel Le Bomin and well starred by Lambert Wilson - Cesar nominated for best actor for his great work- and Isabelle Carré's dazzling acting as his wife. De Gaulle shows how the well-known statesman became a great hero of the Resistance and a brave and beloved figure who had to deal, from abroad, with countless accusations of betrayal and public humiliation. The film also explores the most personal, intimate and protagonist's family that is quite unknown to the general public. It also has nice performances from Olivier Gourmet as Reynaud, Catherine Mouchet, Pierre Hancisse, Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu, Gilles Cohen as Georges Mandel and Tim Hudson as Winston Churchill .

Adding more biographical data to complete those exposed in the film, these are the following: Charles was commissioned as an officer during the First World War, having been wounded several times and then taken prisoner at Verdun. Pétain considered him a very good officer.1 In 1921 he married Yvonne Vendroux, with whom he had three children: Philippe (1921), Élisabeth (1924-2013) and Anne, who had Down syndrome (1928-1948). During the interwar period, he held various military positions, in particular that of secretary of the National Defense Council (1937-1940), under the command of Marshal Philippe Pétain. During the German invasion of May 1940, he led an armored division that counterattacked the invaders; later he was appointed undersecretary of war. When Paul Reynaud's government fell and the Pétain regime was established, its former boss, with the support of the Nazi collaborator, Pierre Laval, confirmed that the new authorities would not continue the war against the Third Reich and on the contrary would plan the French surrender in instead of fighting from Algeria. Refusing to accept his government's armistice with Germany, de Gaulle urged the French population to resist the occupation and continue the struggle in his June 18 appeal from London after having left the country on June 16, 1940. There he assumed the command of Free France or Fighting France. During those years he wrote the book L'Appel (between 1940 and 1942), where he exposes his vision of the war: the enormous tragedy of the occupation, the defeatist spirit, the surrender to the enemy, the call not to give up from London, the organization of Free France, the fight for its dignity in defense of all of France and the contributions that these French made to the allies, through the organization of armed forces that participated in decisive combats against the Wehrmacht. He led a government in exile (founded in London) as well as its armed forces, which were against the Axis powers. Despite the frosty relations he possessed with the United Kingdom and especially the United States, he emerged as the undisputed leader of the French resistance. He became head of the Provisional Government of the French Republic in June 1944, this being the interim government of France after its liberation.
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