The Battle of Algiers

audience Reviews

, 95% Audience Score
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Success in 2 hours and 5 minutes!!!!!!!!!!!!! Starring Jean Martin!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! In Arabic and English versions with English subtitles!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    Great practical effects and makeup give this movie a very gritty realistic look almost as if your watching a real documentary about the real battle. Decent character building though not the best. Definitely worth watching if your into war reenactments films (Lawrence of Arabia-esque) type movies.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    Complete emotional detachment and void of any character development. This film is so underwhelming that it made me strongly dislike the so called protagonists and root heavily for the French.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Crude Fiml that with a documentary style makes clear that brutal violence in managing the investigation allows French paratroops to win rebels. However that is without sense since Revolution is only delaied. Best of best
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    One of my letterboxd top four also the greatest movie ever made masterpiece ❤️
  • Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
    This movie may be important for anyone interested in Algerian or French history, but it's not a good movie. The screenwriters did not bother to provide the characters with backstories that explain their motivations or provide viewers with reasons to care about them as people. Given that the lead characters that we presumably are supposed to empathize with are terrorists who deliberately kill many, many innocent civilians, that would have been a good thing to do. Instead, characters pop up, do things for reasons that aren't well explained, and then are arrested or blown up or whatever.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Gillo Pontecorvo ha plasmato un'opera senza tempo con "La Battaglia di Algeri", un film avvincente che cattura autenticamente la struggente lotta del Fronte di Liberazione Nazionale (FLN) contro la colonizzazione francese. L'approccio realistico di Pontecorvo è un tuffo nel cuore di questa epica battaglia, trasformando la storia in un'esperienza palpabile e coinvolgente. Il regista adotta un realismo sorprendente, usando volti espressivi e una tecnica documentaristica che getta uno sguardo senza veli sulla brutalità della guerra. Il bianco e nero, curato con maestria da Marcello Gatti, e la colonna sonora coinvolgente di Ennio Morricone si fondono magistralmente, creando un'atmosfera intensa che avvolge lo spettatore dall'inizio alla fine. La maestria di Pontecorvo si manifesta nell'equilibrio impeccabile tra le prospettive, evitando semplificazioni e regalando allo spettatore una visione articolata e completa della storia. Ogni scena racconta una storia indimenticabile, ogni inquadratura unisce dramma e profondità psicologica, dando vita a personaggi iconici come Ali La Pointe e il colonnello francese Mathieu. Il film riflette sull'assurdità della guerra, del terrore e della violenza, presentando entrambi i lati senza pregiudizi. Pontecorvo si distingue per la sua capacità di mettere in discussione gli stereotipi, offrendo una visione senza compromessi della complessità umana. "La Battaglia di Algeri" è un trionfo cinematografico, una testimonianza della potenza dell'arte nel dare voce alla storia in modo straordinario. Con maestria tecnica e narrazione coinvolgente, Pontecorvo ha forgiato un capolavoro che va oltre i confini geografici e le barriere temporali. Il film continua a suscitare riflessioni intense, dimostrando la potenza dell'arte nel raccontare la storia in modo accessibile e coinvolgente. In conclusione, "La Battaglia di Algeri" è un'opera cinematografica senza tempo, un viaggio emozionante attraverso la storia che lascia un'impronta indelebile nella memoria dello spettatore. Un'esperienza visiva e narrativa che va oltre la semplice visione, trasportando il pubblico in un mondo di tensione, speranza e tragica bellezza.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Director Gillo Pontecorvo raised the bar forever on movie making with the Battle of Algiers. An almost completely amateur cast, pulled from the streets of Algiers, many who had lived themselves through the uprising against their French colonizers, the movie has an inescapably compelling authenticity. Coupled with a musical score, also with an assist by Pontecorvo, that immediately pulls you in and never lets you go. Unlike almost anything made today, the film takes no sides, but rather presents the story as it unfolded in a documentary style. Are you for the independence fighters or the authorities, and how far is too far for each to go in achieving independence or in maintaining peace. Terrorism? Torture? You'll find no easy answer here. But there are answers plain and simple. Today, on the Freedom Index, Algeria is in the bottom 1/3 of countries in freedom in the category "repressed," while France is in the top 1/3 in the category "mostly free." Algerian's "freedom" fighters in the end purchased oppression with their blood and treasure. The film makers even allude to the difficulty of governing and the uncertainty of revolution in the words of one of the leaders himself, "it is hard to start a revolution, and even harder to keep it going. But the greatest difficulty is in what comes after." Although these lessons come mainly outside of the movie, the movie itself, is an absolute masterpiece.
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    If you would like to more about what was happening in Algiers, this is a good one to have a grasp of it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Going into my initial viewing of "The Battle of Algiers", I knew I was about to witness not just an important piece of world cinema but I did not expect to find such depth and timeless appeal that assaulted me all at once! The Director, Gillo Pontecorvo, is thought of as one of Italy's most acclaimed Directors and this is his masterpiece! Like his early films, "The Battle of Algiers" utilizes a documentary feel and realism but is edited together so wonderfully, that it flows off the screen and bombards the viewer with It's wealth. The film examines the film's title but has a multitude of perseved angles and intentions in what it portrays and to whom. While many, including the U.S. have had subsequent viewings as not just a cautionary tale but one of combating guerilla warfare, to me I saw a brutal fight for freedom and independence above all else! The Algerian's, who played all but the two French officers in the film, were having to go to more and more extreme acts as the French did in order to crush the revolt. We start at the end, then proceed to the genesis of the protagonist and his rough and meaningless upbringing to fighting as a leader of his own people in a battle for the countries freedom and that of it's people. The film is a gut wrenching and morally haunting film on both sides and is wonderfully balanced and portrayed, representing the horrors but also the humanity at the heart of people. I acknowledge this as truly moving and essential cinema that is utterly captivating and will leave you dwelling on what you viewed and all the ground it covered along the way.