Synopsis:
1943. They had not yet set foot in France, but because it's war, Sa?Ød, Abdelkader, Messaoud and Yassir are going to join the French army to free the motherland from the Nazi enemy, like 130 000 other "natives". These heroes, forgotten by History, will vanquish in Italy, in Provence, and in the Vosges before finding themselves alone defending a village in Alsace against a German battalion.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0444182/
Sa?Ød, Messaoud, Abdelkader and Yassir are heroes of the French army, but they have also been forgotten by history. Like the 130,000 soldiers from the French colonies of the Maghreb and Africa, these four young men volunteered to help liberate the "motherland" that they had never seen from the Nazi yoke. The film, Days of Glory (Indig?®nes) [1], directed by Frenchman of Algerian extraction Rachid Bouchareb (who also made the acclaimed Little Senegal, in 2001, which tackled the issue of the memory of slavery), pays tribute to them, and seeks to impress their role and their memory on the minds of people today.
http://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/en/fr...otten-heroes-of-em-days-of-glory-em_5379.html
PARIS (Hollywood Reporter) - The talents behind "Days of Glory," a World War II drama that recounts the sacrifice made by frontline troops from Africa in the rollback of the Nazis, hope their movie will help influence French policy towards veterans from the nation's former colonies.
Director-producer Rachid Bouchareb recently screened his movie, which will be released in North America by the Weinstein Co. and IFC Films, to a select audience including French president Jacques Chirac at a charity event.
Bouchareb said Chirac was sympathetic to the film's specific appeal for non-French veterans to receive the same war pension and invalid benefits as their Gallic counterparts. Until now, they have been paid only a fraction of what French veterans receive.
Several hundred thousand troops from Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Senegal and elsewhere fought with Allied troops to liberate Italy and France, sustaining heavy casualties.
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/art...T084756Z_01_N19299608_RTRUKOC_0_UK-FRANCE.xml
1943. They had not yet set foot in France, but because it's war, Sa?Ød, Abdelkader, Messaoud and Yassir are going to join the French army to free the motherland from the Nazi enemy, like 130 000 other "natives". These heroes, forgotten by History, will vanquish in Italy, in Provence, and in the Vosges before finding themselves alone defending a village in Alsace against a German battalion.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0444182/
Sa?Ød, Messaoud, Abdelkader and Yassir are heroes of the French army, but they have also been forgotten by history. Like the 130,000 soldiers from the French colonies of the Maghreb and Africa, these four young men volunteered to help liberate the "motherland" that they had never seen from the Nazi yoke. The film, Days of Glory (Indig?®nes) [1], directed by Frenchman of Algerian extraction Rachid Bouchareb (who also made the acclaimed Little Senegal, in 2001, which tackled the issue of the memory of slavery), pays tribute to them, and seeks to impress their role and their memory on the minds of people today.
http://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/en/fr...otten-heroes-of-em-days-of-glory-em_5379.html
PARIS (Hollywood Reporter) - The talents behind "Days of Glory," a World War II drama that recounts the sacrifice made by frontline troops from Africa in the rollback of the Nazis, hope their movie will help influence French policy towards veterans from the nation's former colonies.
Director-producer Rachid Bouchareb recently screened his movie, which will be released in North America by the Weinstein Co. and IFC Films, to a select audience including French president Jacques Chirac at a charity event.
Bouchareb said Chirac was sympathetic to the film's specific appeal for non-French veterans to receive the same war pension and invalid benefits as their Gallic counterparts. Until now, they have been paid only a fraction of what French veterans receive.
Several hundred thousand troops from Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Senegal and elsewhere fought with Allied troops to liberate Italy and France, sustaining heavy casualties.
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/art...T084756Z_01_N19299608_RTRUKOC_0_UK-FRANCE.xml