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No Detonations, No Race Against Time, No Pointless Nudity, Just Fine Moviemaking

The film “Diplomacy,” directed by Volker Schlöndorff and written by Schlöndorff and Cyril Gely (based on the latter’s play), is a nice, tight drama set in August of 1944, as the Allies advance on Paris and Adolf Hitler issues the order to destroy the country’s capital.

To that end, the Germans create a plan to blow up the many bridges that cross the Seine, causing major flooding and mayhem.

The rest of the city they plan to blow up too, especially the major stuff: the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, Notre-Dame.

But as General von Choltitz (Niels Arestrup) makes the final arrangements, and the Allies get ever closer, Swedish diplomat Raoul Nordling (André Dussollier) pops in, via a secret staircase in the hotel that was used, in happier times, by Napoleon III to visit his mistress on the sly.

The bulk of the film is a continuous discussion (which turns into an argument) between the general and the diplomat about the morality of destroying a city full of cultural treasures and 1.5 million civilians.

The action cuts away at times to developments elsewhere, but for the most part the story is filmed in one room.

Schlöndorff’s direction is deft and sure. He lets the actors act and the dialogue work. The result is not stagey in the least, and the director puts paid to the idiotic idea, beloved of American directors, that good writing doesn’t make a film.

There is plenty of tension in this movie, but almost all of it is between the two men. The scenes that deal with those charged with detonating the explosives have their own dramatic effect, but they are mostly necessary for exposition.

A standard issue director would have blown up everything in sight, even if the point of the film is that Paris was not destoyed. He would have reduced it to a race against time — will the general get to the phone in time to give the order to stand down? He would have worked in some 21st-century cussing and a pointless nude scene, and made damn sure the thing droned on for a solid two hours.

Thank goodness somebody else got this material.

Netflix does not have a DVD release date yet. But if you miss this film at your nearby moviehouse, see it when it does become available on DVD or for streaming. I recommend it. Highly.

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