Suite Francaise is about
wartime love and sexual passion and captures very well the loneliness of
soldiers away from their homes and loved ones, and the loneliness of the young
women whose men have disappeared into Germany or been killed. And the furtiveness and passion that this
gives to their love affairs with the Germans.
I particularly liked it because I like to read of illicit or non-traditional
love. Of course married and settled love has many satisfactions but there is a
special thrill to love that is not accepted…
Saturday, 18 April 2015
Suite Francais Film
This is a likable film set in the aftermath of the
Fall of France, when the Germans occupied the country. The chief character is a
young woman called Lucille who lives with her mother in law, and is lonely because
her husband is now a prisoner of war in Germany. She doesn’t get on with her mother in law,
who is a well to do and cold hearted widow. Lucille feels bullied by her and hates the way
that her mother in law is harsh towards their tenants.
When a German regiment come
into the town, Lucille notes that the older women freeze them out, but the
young women lonely without their menfolk who are away at war, find it hard to
ignore them. Before long, some of the younger women take German soldiers as
lovers. Lucille is lonely too but her mother in laws strict watchfulness
controls her life. When a German officer is billeted at their house, her mother
in law refuses to talk to him, but Lucille who loves music, gradually develops
a friendship with him. But in the end, she realises that she cannot ignore the
fact that he is German and the occupier of her country.
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