We've owned this film on Blu-Ray for a while but put off watching it because we were worried that it would be grim, and as it's two hours long, it seemed like a large mouthful of gruel was in the offing. However, this turned out not to be the case: it's gripping and startlingly modern, given its cinema verité (the director, Italian Gillo Pontecorvo, for whom this is by far and away his most notable film, had as a slogan "the dictatorship of truth") approach that has it appear like documentary footage. Not only is he using steadicams (in 1966!) but he manipulated the film stock to have a realistically newsreel-like grainy quality. He also used hundreds of extras, so that the whole city becomes a character, and the crowd scenes are breathtaking.
On top of that he used almost entirely non-professional actors, all of the Moroccans being genuine Algiers residents that he picked up off the street because they matched the image of the character that he had in his head (in an interview also on the disk he recounts that this is almost an obsession with him, to the extent that he turned down Sidney Poitier for role in his next film in favor of another non-professional for the same reason). Apart from anything, this tends to mean that there are some amazing faces (in particular that of the actor playing Ali La Pointe (on the right below),
who is one of the first people we see as the film opens, and whose career we follow, although no single person can lay claim to being the protagonist).
The French did not like this film - it won the Golden Lion prize at the Venice Film festival (over Godard's Fahrenheit 451 and Bresson's Au Hazard Balthazar) but they were leery of even putting it on for fear of driving away the French. It didn't even get distributed in France until years later, thanks to the championing of Louis Malle. Having said that, while your sympathies are largely with the Algerian rebels (the FLN), the film does not flinch from showing them blow up innocent civilians, including in at least one case, a baby. And the leader of the French counter-insurgency, Colonel Mathieu (played by the sole professional actor in the bunch, albeit a radical leftist supporter of Algerian independence, a tall, bulgy-eyed, slightly effete (although he fought with the French Resistance in the war) chain-smoker) is, while employing ruthless tactics, disarmingly frank and straightforward. (Basically: "look - you tell me you want to keep Algeria. Well, this is what it takes. I'll do it, but it's on your head.")
The film manages to be picaresque--in the sense that there's no obvious, clear narrative, and we switch viewpoints and pick up characters and dump them without warning, and sometimes it takes you a while to work out what's going on, because the film never holds your hand--while at the same time being gripping, because of its propulsive energy and willingness to shock you. The one concession that undercuts the fly-on-the-wall feeling is the use of music (composed by Ennio Morricone!), but that is sparsely done. (It's also purposely non-partisan, in that scenes of dead French people being pulled out of the wreckage after FLN bombings gets the exact same melancholic theme as scenes of dead Algerians.
Some scenes: the film is almost bookended by a scene in which the French have been led to a secret hiding place where Ali, who is the last remaining FLN higher-up, is squirreled away with accomplices (including a woman and a boy, both of whom the French know are there).
The reason the French have found it is because they have tortured somebody,
and in general, the French forces use of torture is very openly depicted, as is one case of them executing a member of the FLN in a prison courtyard using a guillotine. This event is witnessed by the younger Ali, as, following the 1957-set opening we flash back to 1954 where we see Ali getting arrested following a fight with a gang of French men after one of them trips him as he's running from the cops. As with many of the characters in the film, Ali was a real character - an illiterate street thug who got radicalized in prison and rises through the ranks. We know this is realistic because the film is based on an account written by a real FLN officer... who plays more-or-less himself in the film (he is Saadi Yacef, and he plays Jaffar (second left in the first picture above), which caused Jami to quote Conrad Veidt's character (also Jaffar - although, unlike in Disney's Aladdin, he puts the stress on the first syllable) "it is always Jaffar") and does a very creditable job, as do all the non-professionals.
One of the most compelling sequences is when we watch three women prepare for and carry out three bombings. We watch them dressing up to appear more Western,
be briefed on where they will collect the bombs (whose timers are already going so they have to make sure they get to their targets in time), pass through checkpoints, in one case flirt with a French soldier,
and arrive at the crowded cafes that are their targets, where they have to push their bags out of sight, and they look nervously around the room, and we see them look at all the faces of the people that they are about to kill - mostly young people and one ice-cream-eating baby. The explosions, when they come, are remarkably real - you have to think some stunt people got injured.
Ali's loyalty is proved when he is told to kill a policeman, only to find that they've given him an empty pistol.
But he clubs the policeman and escapes - he's passed the test. Another time, the French are closing in on three FLN leaders, and they try to escape by dressing as veiled women,
but their shoes betray them and only two escape (thanks to the machine guns they have concealed).
Another time two FLN fighters are in an upstairs window taking pot shots at those below. Mathieu appeals on them through a bullhorn
to give up and they say they will lower their weapons in a basket, but instead put a bomb in it. You feel sorry for the soldier who comes to collect the basket - right up until the point that he looks up and tells them to hurry up, followed by a racial slur. Still, being blown up might be a bit much.
Children also participate: one in particular manages to acquire the microphone for the French PA system and tells a crowd of native Algerians who are being herded by French soldiers that the FLN will free them. This might be the same one, however, who is in the cubby-hole with Ali at the beginning, and after all but Ali have been captured or killed (one of them, Larbi Ben M'Hidi, gives a great press conference, responding to a reporter who calls the FLN cowards for using bombs in baskets with "is it not cowardly to drop napalm on innocent villages from planes? Give us your bombers and we'll gladly give up our baskets"), we return and watch as Ali and co., on refusing to come out, are blown up. But then, two years later, suddenly (we are told) a mass uprising happens and the people suddenly are on the march again. The film closes with a close up of a woman in the crowd shouting slogans in exultation. And we know, of course, that liberation followed soon after, because this film followed very soon after that! And that's sort of the marvel of the film: how did they get everyone to recreate the events when they were so raw? Where did they get all the white French characters, essentially playing the bad guys? Really the star of the film is the Casbah, seen before in the film Pepe Le Moko, but the best film set a film ever had, with its impossibly narrow, winding, labyrinthine streets and endless steps and rooftops. Anyway, a breathtaking film, whose influence on later films is incalculable. Without Pentecorvo there would definitely have been no Paul Greengrass, that's for sure. Don't be like us - don't put off watching it because you think you can't handle it. It's not depressing, it's bracing! They really don't make 'em like they used to - except that nobody but Pentecorvo used to make 'em like this either.