Once upon a time, during World War II, somewhere in German-occupied Romania, a night of comic misadventures ensues when a boy discovers a dead soldier.Once upon a time, during World War II, somewhere in German-occupied Romania, a night of comic misadventures ensues when a boy discovers a dead soldier.Once upon a time, during World War II, somewhere in German-occupied Romania, a night of comic misadventures ensues when a boy discovers a dead soldier.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFamily Film, the producers of this movie made significant changes to the final edit, angering Director Bogdan Dumitrescu and his cast. Gérard Depardieu wrote an open letter saying: "I do not accept compromises, I do not like to be fooled". He backed Dumitrescu, who said that the producers are breaking contractual agreements, and did not have copyright over the film's script. In his letter, Depardieu further said he enjoyed making the film and working in Romania with the local actors and actresses. The main problems resulted apparently from the producers' attempts to secure U.S. distribution. To achieve this, the film had been given a happy Hollywood ending and, according to Depardieu, lost the "poetry" of the original version. The film finally premiered in 2013 in Romania with all of the main cast members and the director absent from the opening ceremony.
- ConnectionsRemake of Then I Sentenced Them All to Death (1972)
- SoundtracksLa Marseillaise
(uncredited)
Written by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle
Heard at various times during the film
Featured review
If you've read the reviews on The Rag, you know that in general, I don't care for upsetting movies with a subtitle of, "Life is terrible and people are mean." A Farewell to Fools is such a movie, and if you're sensitive like me, you probably won't like it. Since I love Gérard Depardieu so much, I don't want to see him treated badly.
In a small Nazi-occupied town, a young boy, Bogdan Iancu, is friends with the local "idiot" who isn't an idiot at all but instead a veteran who survived a bullet to the head. Everyone else in the town picks on Gérard, makes fun of him, and treats him like a subhuman, and it's very sad. When Bogdan finds a dead German soldier, the other Nazis demand justice, threatening to kill the ten most prominent members of society in the morning if the murderer doesn't surrender. Led by priest Harvey Keitel and his selfish wife, Laura Morante, the threatened bunch plan on talking Gérard into sacrificing himself. His life is far less worthy than theirs, they think, and they throw him a birthday party to butter him up. "I don't have a birthday," he says, and as it's the first time anyone else in the town has been nice to him, he's excited to be included.
It's sickening to see the lengths of deception the townspeople go to in order to get their way. They promise him a hero's funeral, a gold fence around his burial plot, an engraved portrait on his tombstone, a statue of his likeness, and the renaming of the town square after him. They refill his wine glass, call him "Uncle Theodore" instead of the insulting nickname they usually use, and even take down all their promises in writing as he requests. It's not very enjoyable to watch Gérard's grateful smile as everyone around him plans his death. However, if you do like the "people are mean" movies, you'll probably find a new favorite in this one.
In a small Nazi-occupied town, a young boy, Bogdan Iancu, is friends with the local "idiot" who isn't an idiot at all but instead a veteran who survived a bullet to the head. Everyone else in the town picks on Gérard, makes fun of him, and treats him like a subhuman, and it's very sad. When Bogdan finds a dead German soldier, the other Nazis demand justice, threatening to kill the ten most prominent members of society in the morning if the murderer doesn't surrender. Led by priest Harvey Keitel and his selfish wife, Laura Morante, the threatened bunch plan on talking Gérard into sacrificing himself. His life is far less worthy than theirs, they think, and they throw him a birthday party to butter him up. "I don't have a birthday," he says, and as it's the first time anyone else in the town has been nice to him, he's excited to be included.
It's sickening to see the lengths of deception the townspeople go to in order to get their way. They promise him a hero's funeral, a gold fence around his burial plot, an engraved portrait on his tombstone, a statue of his likeness, and the renaming of the town square after him. They refill his wine glass, call him "Uncle Theodore" instead of the insulting nickname they usually use, and even take down all their promises in writing as he requests. It's not very enjoyable to watch Gérard's grateful smile as everyone around him plans his death. However, if you do like the "people are mean" movies, you'll probably find a new favorite in this one.
- HotToastyRag
- Aug 9, 2019
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Delilere Veda
- Filming locations
- Sighisoara, Mures, Romania(Exterior)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €3,300,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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