Intimate Enemies

Intimate Enemies

Intimate Enemies Poster
YouTube Thumbnail

The scars of war last forever

Director: Florent-Emilio Siri

Writer: Patrick Rotman

Producer: François Kraus, Denis Pineau-Valencienne

A drama following a French platoon during Algeria's war of independence.

108 min Rating: 6.3/10 Released
Watch Trailer

Movie Info

Director: Florent-Emilio Siri

Writer: Patrick Rotman

Producer: François Kraus, Denis Pineau-Valencienne

Production Companies: Les Films du Kiosque, SND, Agora Films, France 2 Cinéma

Countries: France, Morocco

Similar Movies

The Day the Mountain Cried
The Day the Mountain Cried
2020-01-01
Driving Miss Daisy
Driving Miss Daisy
1989-12-13
Cléo from 5 to 7
Cléo from 5 to 7
1962-04-11
Ed Wood
Ed Wood
1994-09-28
Platoon
Platoon
1986-12-19
Born on the Fourth of July
Born on the Fourth of July
1989-12-20
Pleasantville
Pleasantville
1998-09-17
Indochine
Indochine
1992-04-15
Veronika Voss
Veronika Voss
1982-05-13
Gods and Monsters
Gods and Monsters
1998-09-12
Darkness in Tenement 45
Darkness in Tenement 45
2020-10-08
Full Metal Jacket
Full Metal Jacket
1987-06-26
Arezki, l'indigène
Arezki, l'indigène
2008-10-01
L.A. Confidential
L.A. Confidential
1997-09-19
James Dean
James Dean
2001-08-04
Good Night, and Good Luck.
Good Night, and Good Luck.
2005-09-16
Alive
Alive
2016-11-23
Once a Year on Blackpool Sands
Once a Year on Blackpool Sands
2021-11-21
Revolutionary Road
Revolutionary Road
2008-12-19
A Captain's Honor
A Captain's Honor
1982-12-29

User Reviews

What Others Said

John Chard: The war they tried to ignore! L'ennemi intime (Intimate Enemies) is a raw picture looking at French conscripts during the Algeria War. It was a war that was fought for 8 years between 1954-1962, it was also a war that France failed to even acknowledged had existed until over three decades later. Pic picks up the thread in 1959 and the focal point is the relationship between Lieutenant Terrien (Benoît Magimel) and Sergent Dougnac (Albert Dupontel). The former is the new guy, idealistic, while the latter is the grizzled and battled scarred veteran. The Barbarian Hordes. With the French locked in battle against the Algerian rebels, the film runs the protagonists through the psychological mangler. The horrors of war are born out, with both sides of the conflict depicted with a barbarity that's harrowing in nature. As the pic progresses you can see Terrien being worn down by what he observes, the key being he is losing his idealistic heart. Moral dilemmas are deftly inserted into the screenplay, but disappointingly the political thrum that was driving the conflict is given short shrift. From an action stand point director and co-writer Florent-Emilio Siri strikes hard, with two particular sequences - one a field of fleeing soldiers and the finale involving air-strikes - outstanding in construction. Siri also knows when to tighten the emotional noose, bringing to us poignant scenes that leave a lump in the throat. Giovanni Fiore Coltellacci's cinematography is also to be applauded, muted colours mingle with stark framing compositions to really give the sense of realism that the screenplay demands and deserves. Aside from the lack of political basis (we need to know more about this war), the only other real problems with the piece is the conventionality, and that it inevitably is filled with war film stereotypes. However, this is very good film making and the makers bring the story to vivid life, always remaining fascinating and certainly unforgettable. 8/10