La vie et rien d'autre

Bertrand Tavernier

La vie et rien d'autre Life and Nothing But [videorecording] = Life and Nothing But Bertrand Tavernier - France Hachette Première AB Films Little Bear 1989 - 1 videodisc (135 min.) : sound, color. 4 3/4 in.



From case cover:
Deemed a "masterpiece" by critic David Thomson, LIFE AND NOTHING BUT is one of director Bertrand Tavernier's (LET JOY REIGN SUPREME, ROUND MIDNIGHT) most ambitious films. With this gorgeously photographed anti-war epic, Tavernier examines the emotional hurdles that separate rich from poor, men from women, history from truth and regret from hope.
A year after W.W.I has ended, cynical Major Dellaplane has the difficult task of identifying and interring thousands of fallen French soldiers anonymously languishing in field hospitals and littering the vast Verdun battlefield. Dellaplane has also become reluctant shepherd to an ad hoc society grown around the legions of widowed wives and mothers combing the French countryside fro word of their loved ones. When a buried hospital train yields a fresh source of possibly recognizable bodies, Irene, a haughty Parisian aristocrat and Alice, a hopeful young schoolteacher, form an unlikely alliance with the Major. As the train's surprising cargo is revealed, the three searchers must choose between life in a post-war world stripped of illusions or the seductive self-imprisonment of bitterness and mourning for days, lives and loves gone by.
Tavernier regular Noiret won a French Cesar for his performance opposite the "ravishingly gifted actress" (The Washington Post) Sabine Azema as Irene. In courageously and gracefully celebrating inexhaustible human resilience and burgeoning romance amidst unspeakably appalling loss, LIFE AND NOTHING BUT "conveys both the fragile and the indestructible" (The New York Times).


DVD video; Dolby Digital 2.0; stereo; NTSC; Regions 1-6; 2.35:1 as 16:9 widescreen.


French audio. Optional English subtitles.

PN1997 / .V540 1989