Deserter

2002
5.3| 1h30m| en
Details

Unlikely friends in a melting pot of confusion. Simon Murray fights for the French Foreign Legion. Pascal Dupont fights for himself. War torn men question honour, hope, morality...because you can desert everything...except yourself.

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

Stream on any device, 30-day free trial Watch Now

Trailers & Clips

Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Tymon Sutton The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.
Geraldine The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
Janis One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.
trainerlkn Given who the producer was I.e. a real Legionnaire, I expected more accuracy. Legionnaires only wear the winged dagger brevet after joining the Second Para Regiment or 2eme REP as it's known nowadays.His own book made no mention of a lot of what was in the movie which is probably why they should say "loosely" based on a true story instead of based on a true story.Someone else made mention of the brutality of the NCOs being inaccurate. Actually that's not true. In the epoch the level portrayed in the movie the brutality actually existed (it calmed down a lot later on in the eighties whene
JamieWJackson Sometimes it helps to step outside of the familiar. In "Deserter", my American perspective gets broadened by looking at an Arab country through the eyes of a young Brit placed within the French Foreign Legion. With my own country removed entirely from the scene, I thus start with no default "side" here. The movie does start off following the FFL, but of course expands before too long to show us (some of) the Arab side as well.I'd like to know, but don't know, how true to reality the movie is. Most of what we're shown seemed very plausible to me. A few bits did feel "Hollywoodized" but perhaps were reasonable distillations of multiple events.What made the biggest impression on me was the discomfort of Murray as he came face to face with the inexorable underlayment of the whole situation: that military occupation is fundamentally wrong because it is not consensual. That's a good lesson for everyone.I'm surprised this only has a 5.3. I wouldn't call it a great movie, but it's well done and involving and deserves a higher score.My biggest complaint is that the accents were hard for me to understand, especially near the beginning. With the mixture of different national origins of the characters and some of the dialog being in French with the rest in (mostly) French-accented English, a lot of the early lines were lost on me. I almost stopped watching after about 10 minutes due to this. I'm glad I didn't.
Guy DESERTER is an excellent micro-budget film ($3.5 million apparently) which does an awful lot with very little. Based on Simon Murray's famous memoir "Legionnaire" - the film was retitled to avoid confusion with a JCVD film of the same name - it's about a jilted Englishman in the 1960s who joins the French Foreign Legion and fights with them in Algeria, before facing a moral crisis. It's suitably authentic in the details and mood of life in the Legion, although some of the props (tanks, trucks) are inaccurate. The tiny budget often works in the film's favour; the actors (who do very well) are the right age (early 20s) for once because older stars were too pricey; the battle scenes have a documentary vividness because they can't afford silly lenses or hyper-editing (the gasoline explosions are stupid though); and the story is short and sharp because there wasn't the money for unnecessary subplots. Generally it gives a good overview of the Algerian War, from a multitude of perspectives: an Englishman, the French military, the French colonists and the Arabs. Life in the FFL - the sun-scorched marches, the brutal punishments, the ferocious discipline, the primeval initiation ceremony, the intense camaraderie and the brutal if effective counter-insurgency tactics - is extremely well conveyed. Occasionally it threatens to veer into political correctness or melodrama but it always recovers in time. Overall, a small, good film on an interesting subject. I wish there were more like it.
mombasa_pete I liked this film immensely, it has very nice scenery in Morocco, and strong characterizations, and in this case the introduction of the love interest actually drives the story along and makes it even more compelling.Especially when the Legionnaires have to make a choice to side with the OAS the breakaway French military faction opposing deGaulle, this makes it fascinating! I thought the characters were well defined, and the film showed enough for us to get a true picture of Legion life: the brutal training, the marches, the NCOs, the officer class, the ceremonies, the skirmishes with the Arabs, the sense of loyalty.Also the film had enough money spent on it to make a convincing portrait of Morocco at this period of transition, you have the colonial French architecture, and the spectacular desert scenery! I recommend any Foreign Legion fans to buy this film and watch it again and again!

Similar Movies to Deserter