Beyond the Breaking News

‘A Man of His Time’ Review: Sprawling, Sarcastic and Surprisingly Modern, This French Story of a Nazi Collaborator Reveals Just How Banal Evil Can Be

United States News News

‘A Man of His Time’ Review: Sprawling, Sarcastic and Surprisingly Modern, This French Story of a Nazi Collaborator Reveals Just How Banal Evil Can Be
United States Latest News,United States Headlines

The second feature from writer-director Emmanuel Marre ('Zero F***s Given') is based on the life of his great-grandfather, an author and engineer who chose to work for the fascist Vichy regime.

was lambasted by critics during its 1974 release, more or less pushing Malle into artistic self-exile in the years that followed, French cinema has generally shied away from stories dealing with Nazi collaborators.

This is partly because it’s hard to make a film about such an unlikeable character: Who wants to watch two hours of someone saluting Hitler and willingly sending Jews off to the concentration camp? It’s also becausestill has a hard time reckoning with WWII, which involved heroic acts by both the Resistance and its exiled leadership and his matinee idol daughter, Corinne. Both polished and punishing, Giannoli’s film attempted to simultaneously condemn its protagonists, and, if not necessarily redeem them, to at least make us empathize with some of their suffering.

The result was a work that never managed to find a coherent point-of-view, which didn’t prevent it from taking in a decent $7 million at the local box office, or from), is also the epic tale of a collaborator — although this one happens to be the great-grandfather of writer-director Emmanuel Marre, who gets upgraded to Cannes’ competition this year after his memorable debut,It’s hard to categorize Marre’s second feature, which is ostensibly a period piece but seems more contemporary, like a grungy indie flick in which everyone wears old sports suits and vintage hairstyles yet behaves very much the way people do now.

The film feels fresh and off-the-cuff, as if someone traveled back to 1940 with an iPhone and hit record, chronicling the dark years of far-right obedience and moral decadence. The film can also feel infuriating — quite intentionally so.

Marre pulls no punches with his unesteemed ancestor, Henri Marre , a writer, engineer, and rather pathetic social climber who would do anything to get ahead, including whatever the Nazi-supporting leadership required of him when he served as their faithful employee. Swaths of the movie are therefore dedicated to watching him execute mundane middle-management tasks or sit through yawn-inducing meetings with his staff and superiors, as if to underline the utter mediocrity of the whole fascist endeavor in France.

, but far less extravagant) filled with officials and arrivistes who’ve descended to the spa city of Vichy, where a collaborationist government lead by aging WWI hero Philippe Petain has been set up in the southern Free Zone. . Among them we spot Henri, dressed to the nines and looking to make some contacts, like a pharmaceutical salesman at a medical convention .

Too eager to please when he’s not being an insufferable know-it-all, he walks around plugging his latest book,, which may have been a better English-language title for the film), a technocratic treatise that promises to rejuvenate the French economy under Nazi control. Cinematographer Olivier Boonjing lights the party sequence with garish photofloods, as if he were shooting videos to be posted later on TikTok.

It’s a jarring effect at first — as are some of the film’s music choices, which highlight ‘80s-era hits by Opus and Alphaville that deliberately clash with the time period — much in the way that Josh Safdie used modern pop classics, including another Alphaville track, in The link between past and present is surely deliberate on Marre’s part, who’s trying to depict occupied France through the prism of today.

If directors like him and Giannoli have chosen to revisit the debacles of the Vichy era, it can only be because their country is currently facing a similar political upheaveal — one that, in the next presidential election, could see its first far-right head of state since Petain. , which painstakingly chronicles Henri’s rise from unknown author to — and this is the best he can get — regional director of the Free Zone’s unemployment agency.

Working in a converted building out of the nondescript city of Limoges, he rules over an unruly staff that includes a hapless secretary and a Jewish right-hand man , who provide moments of comic relief, as if they were performing in a spinoff ofAnd yet, there is nothing funny about what Henri is up to down there, especially when he agrees to round up foreign workers into labor camps, and, in one unforgivable instance, signs off on transports shipping Jewish families toward the east. You can tell he has some misgivings about this, because despite everything he accepts as a Vichy official, Henri isn’t exactly evil — he’s just weak and banal.

, gives a career-best performance here, revealing his character’s deep yearnings and fear of failure. Henri is so afraid to fall out of step with those in charge that he’s willing to throw everyone else under the bus — and sometimes on a train to Auschwitz.

Henri also wants to desperately please his wife, Paulette , with whom he has a tumultuous marriage that’s first introduced through an epistolary voiceover. The two no longer share much passion together, and Paulette mostly sees Henri as a loser who failed at several business ventures before arriving in Vichy and trying to make a name for himself.

The action in the film’s second half shifts back and forth between the day-to-day dealings at the unemployment office and life on the homefront once Paulette and the kids show up in Limoges. Neither setting brings Henri much happiness, even if he and Paulette manage to temporarily rekindle their love — that is until she learns about what he’s been up to at work.

The fact that the highlight of Henri’s wartime experience seems to be the moment Petain arrives in Limoges for a parade, only to shun him during a meet-and-greet afterwards, reveals to what extent all his efforts were in vain. Not long after that happens, the Allies invade Normandy and the whole regime is about to crumble, leaving Henri and his fellowto either flee for the nearest border or face a firing squad.

“Nothing remarkable will ever happen to you,” a drunken palm reader tells Henri at that first party in Vichy, and in a sense he was right: Henri’s trajectory is mostly unexceptional, even if he lived through exceptional times. But he decided to side with the wrong team, condemning him to the blacklist of French history. , Marre is unequivocal about his great-grandfather, portraying him as a craven mediocrity who put his career above everything else, including other human lives.

And yet, the director manages to show some compassion for Henri as well — not because he respects or admires him, but because he sees him as so helplessly flawed, so desperate to succeed. By telling Henri’s shameful story, he seems to be asking everyone watching what they would have done in his place back then. And, perhaps, now.internationalThe Hollywood Reporter is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2026 The Hollywood Reporter, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

THR /  🏆 411. in US

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Carlsbad man charged with hate crime for alleged assault on Jewish man in Los AngelesCarlsbad man charged with hate crime for alleged assault on Jewish man in Los AngelesA San Diego County man was arrested Monday in connection with an alleged assault on a Jewish man near a synagogue in the Pico-Robertson area of Los Angeles two years ago.
Read more »

San Diego County man charged with hate crime for alleged assault on Jewish man in LASan Diego County man charged with hate crime for alleged assault on Jewish man in LAA San Diego County man was arrested Monday, May 18 in connection with an alleged assault on a Jewish man near a synagogue in the Pico-Robertson area of Los Angeles two years ago.
Read more »

Man charged with weapons violations after allegedly threatening to kill man with gunMan charged with weapons violations after allegedly threatening to kill man with gunA man is facing charges after police say he threatened to kill a man with a handgun, which he was not allowed to own due to previous felony convictions.
Read more »

Man wins lottery for the 18th timeMan wins lottery for the 18th timeAn Idaho man is on a nearly 30-year hot streak when it comes to playing the lottery, recently earning his 18th win.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-06-16 09:50:39