Un village français

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Un village français
Created byFrédéric Krivine
Philippe Triboit
Emmanuel Daucé
StarringRobin Renucci
Audrey Fleurot
Marie Kremer
Francis Renaud
Nicolas Gob
and others
Country of originFrance
Original languagesFrench
German
No. of seasons7
No. of episodes72
Production
Running time42–55 minutes
Original release
NetworkFrance 3
Release4 June 2009 (2009-06-04) –
30 November 2017 (2017-11-30)

Un village français (A French Village) is a French television drama series created by chief writer Frédéric Krivine and principal director Philippe Triboit, with the assistance of historical consultant Jean-Pierre Azéma.[1] It is set in Villeneuve, a fictional commune, in the Jura, in German-occupied France during the Second World War, and represents, according to the New York Times, "the first major French television series seriously to address collaboration during the Nazi occupation in World War II."[2]

The series was first broadcast on France 3 in June 2009, and has also been shown in Belgium, Switzerland and Canada on TV5 Monde and on MBC in South Korea. In the USA it has been shown on the French language entertainment network TV5MONDE, the MHz Choice streaming service (through Amazon Prime) and Hulu, or for free on some PBS stations.

Synopsis[edit]

In June 1940, German military forces invade the fictional village of Villeneuve, near the French-Swiss border in the department (province) of Jura, France. The village is put into disarray by the occupying German military, which quickly takes control of all aspects of Villeneuve life, including the subjugation of the local government and police. During the invasion, many residents are either killed or wounded, but the survivors attempt to rebuild from the carnage and try to make sense of the German occupation and the new order that has descended upon their village.

Over the course of the series, viewers witness the evolution of main characters and a variety of minor and recurring characters, as they resist, adapt or collaborate to varying degrees with the occupying German forces with a strong Gestapo presence. The series also presents the perspective of an SS officer, Heinrich Müller, a German who investigates acts of resistance and helps to administer and enforce German rule in the village, as the series's main antagonist.

Each season corresponds to one year of the occupation, with the exception of seasons two and three, which jointly cover 1941. Stories are set almost exclusively in and around Villeneuve at locations like the school, private residences, police headquarters, German military and SS headquarters, brothel, government offices, local businesses, and surrounding farms and countryside.

Both main and supporting characters' individual loyalties, friendships, morals, and family ties are routinely put to the test as a result of greed, hunger, violence, antisemitism, power struggles, and unseen events occurring during World War II as the village's resources and manpower are increasingly diverted towards supporting the German war effort.

All political dissent and resistance by the occupied villagers is brutally repressed by certain members of the Villeneuve police, the newly formed Milice and the Gestapo, which uses coercion, torture and murder to achieve their goal of a subdued populace they view as inferior. The Gestapo and German military leaders also engage in rounding up the village's Jewish population for deportation to foreign ghettos and concentration camps by putting pressure upon the local police and political leaders to meet strict Jewish deportation quotas.

Other story lines focus upon the formation and coalescence of disparate French resistance groups in the area including the local communist party, resistance fighters, French Forces of the Interior, police sympathetic to the cause and a ragtag group of inexperienced fighters hiding in the surrounding wooded areas, primarily disaffected youths fleeing the German policy of Service du travail obligatoire, a forced labour program that provides manpower for factories based in Germany. In season 6 (1944), after the Allies liberate Paris, the French resistance makes contact with members of the US Army working behind enemy lines and begins to cooperate directly with the Allies to help sabotage German military operations.

Cast members[edit]

Main cast (in alphabetical order)[edit]

Robin Renucci, in costume as Daniel Larcher.
Actor Role Duration
Emmanuelle Bach Jeannine Schwartz Season 1–7
Patrick Descamps Henri De Kervern Season 1–4, 6-7
Nade Dieu Marie Germain Season 1–6
Audrey Fleurot Hortense Larcher Season 1–7
Nicolas Gob Jean Marchetti Season 1–7
Thierry Godard Raymond Schwartz Season 1–7
Marie Kremer Lucienne Borderie Season 1–7
Francis Renaud Jacques Season 1
Robin Renucci Daniel Larcher Season 1–7
Fabrizio Rongione Marcel Larcher Season 1–5
Richard Sammel Heinrich Müller Season 2–7

Recurring cast (in alphabetical order)[edit]

Actor Role Duration
Laurent Bateau Albert Crémieux Season 3–4
Bernard Blancan Anselme Season 4–7
Nathalie Cerda Madame Morhange Season 1–4
Cyril Couton Servier Season 1-7
Cyril Descours Yvon Season 3
Armelle Deutsch Natacha Season 1
Amandine Dewasmes Marguerite Season 5
Constance Dollé Suzanne Richard Season 1–7
Maxim Driesen Gustave Larcher Season 1–7
Dan Herzberg Lorrain Germain Season 1–2
François Loriquet Jules Bériot Season 1–7
Martin Loizillon Antoine Season 5–7
Axelle Maricq Rita de Witte Season 4, 6-7
Maëva Pasquali Émilie Season 2–3
Philippe Résimont Philippe Chassagne Season 4–6
Laura Stainkrycer Sarah Season 1–4
Samuel Theis Kurt Wagner Season 1–3, 6

Guest (in alphabetical order)[edit]

Actor Role Duration
Grégory Gadebois Garnier 1 Episode

Production[edit]

Jean-Philippe Amar directed 23 episodes, Philippe Triboit directed 16 episodes, Patrice Martineau directed 13 episodes, Jean-Marc Brondolo directed 12 episodes, and Olivier Guignard directed the 6 first episodes of the TV series.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "" Un Village français " : les clefs d'un succès". The Conversation. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  2. ^ ""The Elusive Pleasures of French TV Series"". Retrieved 28 August 2021.

External links[edit]