Peuple en marche
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Peuple en marche (Arabic: شعب زاحف) is a 1963 documentary film.[1]
Synopsis
[edit]In 1962, René Vautier, together with some Algerian friends, organized an audiovisual formation center to encourage a "dialogue in images" between the two factions. A film was edited from that experience, but the French police partially destroyed it. The images that were saved represent an unprecedented historical document: They tell of the Algerian War and the history of the ALN (National Liberation Army), as well as showing life after the war and, particularly, the reconstruction of the cities and the countryside after the war of Independence.
References
[edit]- ^ "Un peuple en marche - René VAUTIER - 1963 - Base documentaire - Cinémathèque de Bretagne - Gwarez Filmoù - Brittany Film Archives". Un peuple en marche - René VAUTIER - 1963 - Base documentaire - Cinémathèque de Bretagne - Gwarez Filmoù - Brittany Film Archives (in French). Retrieved 2023-07-28.
External links
[edit]- Peuple en marche at IMDb
- African Film Festival of Cordoba-FCAT (license CC BY-SA-3.0)[dead link]
Categories:
- 1963 films
- Creative Commons-licensed documentary films
- 1963 documentary films
- Algerian documentary films
- Documentary films about the Algerian War
- Documentary films about the cinema of Africa
- Documentary films about African resistance to colonialism
- Films directed by René Vautier
- Algerian film stubs
- War documentary film stubs