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À Nous la Liberté
Directed by
René Clair
Not Rated
1931
1h 35m
Comedy
,
Musical
,
and more
7.4
100%
80%
Add to Watchlist
Seeking better life, two convicts escape from prison.
More
Where to Watch À Nous la Liberté
Criterion Channel
Subscription
Cast of À Nous la Liberté
Henri Marchand
Emile
Raymond Cordy
Louis
Rolla France
Jeanne
Paul Ollivier
Paul Imaque, l'oncle
Jacques Shelly
Paul
Germaine Aussey
Maud
Léon Lorin
Le vieux monsieur sourd
Vincent Hyspa
Le vieil orateur
André Michaud
Le contremaitre
Maximilienne
Une invitée au diner
Alexander D'Arcy
Le gigolo
William Burke
L'ancien détenu
Eugène Stuber
Un gangster
Ritou Lancyle
Marguerite de Morlaye
Une invitée au diner
Léon Courtois
Robert Charlet
Albert Broquin
Le marchand de primeurs
À Nous la Liberté Ratings & Reviews
Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews
Dennis Schwartz
An engrossing satire on modern society's belief in the new industrialization age, showing the Machine was not mankind's salvation.
EmanuelLevy.Com
Emanuel Levy
One of French director Rene Clair's great films, this 1931 poignant exploration of the working conditions of industrial laborers was nominated for the Interior Decoration Oscar.
New York Times
Mordaunt Hall
A Nous, la Libert is assuredly different from any other screen feature. It bristles with strange originality.
About.com
Jurgen Fauth
Its themes are couched in so much wit and silliness that it doesn't take a communist to enjoy it.
Apollo Guide
Dan Jardine
Deserves to come out from under the long shadows cast by Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times, and bask in the adulation of a whole new generation of filmgoers.
Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
Ken Hanke
Wildly funny, endlessly creative, experimental and utterly charming, it is a too-often overlooked classic.
Reno Gazette-Journal
Mark Robison
If the notion of a 1931 semi-silent French movie doesn't scare you off, this minor masterpiece might be worth checking out. Political historians and film fanatics will be especially interested.
Filmcritic.com
Christopher Null
Pioneering... extravagant.
Q Network Film Desk
James Kendrick
a delightfully radical farce about freeing oneself from the controls of social and economic oppression
Classic Film and Television
Michael E. Grost
Influential French comedy about a world beyond work.
Village Voice
Jerry Tallmer
A Nous la Liberte is in my opinion one of the few accepted classics that really holds up and must be seen.
DVDJournal.com
Mark Bourne
...displays Clair's mastery of artful whimsy by mixing sound (especially song), sweet-faced storytelling, and visual skill.
Esquire Magazine
Meyer Levin (Patterson Murphy)
The Rene Clair musical satire remains in my mind for its quickness of spirit, and because it had something to say.
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
A period piece in the best sense.
TheMovieReport.com
Michael Dequina
All of the layers are brought together through Clair's clever use of sound and image.
Combustible Celluloid
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Compared to his contemporaries Jean Renoir and Jean Vigo, Clair was a minor talent, though both of these films do contain innovative uses of sound mixed with silent film.
TV Guide
This classic satire on the dehumanization of industrial workers is one of Rene Clair's greatest achievements.
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