Forbidden Games

  • France Jeux interdits
Trailer

Plots(1)

A timeless evocation of the loss of innocence, René Clément's devastating Forbidden Games tells the story of a young orphan and her friend forced to fend for themselves in World War II France. (official distributor synopsis)

Reviews (2)

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kaylin 

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English A powerful film about how being a child is not easy, especially not during wartime. Yes, perhaps the children slightly deviated from the adult laws, but is it necessary to punish them for it? Adults simply think that everything they do is right, which isn't necessarily true. The worst part is that this applies in many cases. ()

gudaulin 

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English Forbidden Games represents such a sympathetic and refined kitsch that it compensates for the traumas of World War II. I do not mean that kitsch in a bad way, as I can imagine that emotions could be evoked from the audience in a disproportionately more effective and vulgar way. Nevertheless, the game of two children with a pet cemetery, the cuteness of a 5-year-old girl's expression, and the sympathetic squabbling of two peasant families simply invite this designation. If the screenwriter wanted and had the courage, he could have dealt with the bitter experiences of World War II in a much more painful and artistically demanding way. The film didn't offend me in any way, but as for the main plotline, it didn't affect me significantly either. If such a film were made a year after the war, I wouldn't hesitate to give it 4 stars, but after 7 years, it only seems purposefully driven. What I really liked, however, was the portrayal of the French countryside and its inhabitants - perhaps because a relatively short time had passed, the view is realistic and does not feel unnatural or forced like the current ideas of urban intellectuals about an idyllic life in the lap of nature. Overall impression: 65%. ()