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The Battle of Algiers - Criterion Collection
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The Battle of Algiers - Criterion Collection List Price: $49.95
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Features
 Anamorphic
 Box set
 Black & White
 Closed-captioned
 DVD-Video
 Special Edition
 Subtitled
 Widescreen
 NTSC

In Theaters : 20 September, 1967
DVD Release : 12 October, 2004
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The Battle of Algiers - Criterion Collection description
Director Gillo Pontecorvo's 1966 movie The Battle of Algiers concerns the violent struggle in the late 1950s for Algerian independence from France, where the film was banned on its release for fear of creating civil disturbances. Certainly, the heady, insurrectionary mood of the film, enhanced by a relentlessly pulsating Ennio Morricone soundtrack, makes for an emotionally high temperature throughout. Decades later, the advent of the "war against terror" has only intensified the film's relevance.

Shot in a gripping, quasi-documentary style, The Battle of Algiers uses a cast of untrained actors coupled with a stern voiceover. Initially, the film focuses on the conversion of young hoodlum Ali La Pointe (Brahim Haggiag) to F.L.N. (the Algerian Liberation Front). However, as a sequence of outrages and violent counter-terrorist measures ensue, it becomes clear that, as in Eisenstein's October, it is the Revolution itself that is the true star of the film.

Pontecorvo balances cinematic tension with grimly acute political insight. He also manages an evenhandedness in depicting the adversaries. He doesn't flinch from demonstrating the civilian consequences of the F.L.N.'s bombings, while Colonel Mathieu, the French office brought in to quell the nationalists, is played by Jean Martin as a determined, shrewd, and, in his own way, honorable man. However, the closing scenes of the movie--a welter of smoke, teeming street demonstrations, and the pealing white noise of ululations--leaves the viewer both intellectually and emotionally convinced of the rightfulness of the liberation struggle. This is surely among a handful of the finest movies ever made. --David Stubbs

The Battle of Algiers - Criterion Collection Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ Unrelenting but very apropos to today's headlines
The story (as told from Algerian eyes) of the battle for the control of French Algeria remains poignant, timely and powerful after more than 40 years. It's no wonder that the U.S. military top brass studied this film; it's probably "Occupation 101" for any military college in the world. The Criterion edition is the one to get, not only for the plethora of extras, but also for the clean, crisp digitally enhanced DVDs.
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