Hungarian filmmaker László Nemes directs Gilles Lellouche and Lars Eidinger in this Cannes competition film, an unadorned depiction of the final days of a national icon.
The French Resistance hero Jean Moulin was 44 when he was captured by the Gestapo in Lyon and tortured until his death, in July of 1943.
He has since become a national symbol of France’s fight against the Nazis, perhaps a figure of some renewed relevance now that various far-right factions are making inroads in French elections, and around the world. It thus may be an apt time for the biopicNemes is something of a specialist in this strain of historical drama.
His past films have covered the Hungarian Uprising, the fraught lead-up to WWI and, in 2015’s excruciating, which uses the nervy technique of keeping the camera very close on one prisoner as hell is unleashed in the periphery. , by contrast, has no real gimmick; it is stolid and straightforward, shot in hues of black and pallid yellow, like an old newspaper.
It’s a handsomely mounted film, full of precise period detail, but is otherwise undistinguished from many solemn, exacting biopics that have come before it. At the film’s outset, it seems we are to be served a tense, lo-fi espionage thriller. Parachutes twirl out of an inky night sky, one carrying Moulin , who is about to become the first president of the National Council of the Resistance.
We see him go about his clandestine work, meeting with various members of the underground and making split-second decisions in the wake of a close ally’s arrest. With its dark cobbled streets, its curls of cigarette smoke, its furtive glances,effectively evokes past spy noirs. Nemes does not give us any time to figure out who’s who and, really, what’s happening, but watching all this furtive tradecraft is compelling enough.
When an emergency meeting with Moulin’s deputies is raided by the Gestapo, though, the film takes on a different shape. It becomes a grueling procedural about Moulin’s imprisonment and torture, during which Moulin steadfastly — and quite courageously — refuses to give his interrogators the information they’re after. Nemes stages all this awfulness with a formal dispassion; we get no swelling music to underpin Moulin’s heroism, there are no rousing speeches. It is only murk and pain, though Nemes does blessedly spare us many of the gorier bits. Lellouche, who is about ten years older than Moulin was at the time, is mostly steely and stony-faced.
Toward the end of Moulin’s ordeal, a little more emotion seeps out — a “Do it for France” plea for a fellow prisoner to kill him, a bit of tenderness toward his brutalized cellmate, an anthem sung in the face of a firing squad — but otherwise Lellouche is asked to be collected and impassive, a memorial statue come to life. The film picks up some dreadful energy whenever notorious Gestapo official Klaus Barbie enters the frame.
Barbie, played with frightening calm by, was the overseer of Moulin’s interrogation, a duty we see him carry out with chilling determination. Eidinger brings sorely needed spark to these miserable proceedings; his profile of sociopathic villainy is, unfortunately or not, the most electric aspect of the film. We have seen some version of this rendering of haughty, cruel, petulant Nazi pathology before, perhaps most notably from Ralph Fiennes in.
Eidinger is maybe not quite that terrifying, but he ably serves as a locus of our anger and disgust. One then gets even angrier upon recalling that the good ol’ US of A helped Barbie avoid imprisonment for three decades after the war. Nemes is not interested in such broader context. He and screenwriter Olivier Demangel keep the film tight and focused, marching the audience through the grinding paces of Moulin’s resistance and then reaching an abrupt conclusion.
No title cards summing up Moulin’s noble deeds greet us at the end; there is no misty coda. Nemes doesn’t even do much speculating about who might have betrayed Moulin and his compatriots, which remains a matter of some debate in France. will stir patriotic sentiment in some French people who see it, but otherwise it is difficult to feel a real sense of purpose animating the film, which is so blunt and un-editorialized that we might as well be watching a just-the-facts documentary. Though, there is no archival footage of Moulin’s bloody crucible, and Nemes apparently had some interest in filming that. Which makes one a little queasy, just asdid for many viewers a decade ago.
Nemes seems to believe that to graphically depict is to remember and honor. Maybe there is some truth to that. But it is nonetheless too easy to question the film’s motives, and its approach — would Moulin want to be remembered for the mechanics of his slow and painful death, or for what he died trying to save? The Hollywood Reporter is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2026 The Hollywood Reporter, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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.
‘Cantona’ Review: French Soccer Great Eric Cantona Gets a Generous, Nostalgia-Inducing DocumentaryDirectors David Tryhorn and Ben Nicholas ('Pele') coax frank talk from the striker in this Cannes-bowing portrait of the tempestuous but gifted player.
Read more »
18 Years After Iron Man, Spider-Man Is Still Marvel's Most Important HeroEven though Iron Man helped popularize the MCU, it is Spider-Man who remains Marvel's most important hero to this day.
Read more »
Félix Lefebvre slept in a grizzly cell for six months movie shoot (Exclusive Cannes Clip)French actor Félix Lefebvre slept in a bear-infested, mattress-less cell during a movie shoot, connected to his co-star's experience in the Second World War. A Hungarian filmmaker revisits Cannes with a film based on the true story of French resistance hero Jean Moulin, played by Lellouche.
Read more »
After ‘Son of Saul,’ László Nemes Returns to WWII With ‘Moulin’ and a Warning About Tyranny: ‘You Have to Choose Your Side’Laszlo Nemes is returning to Cannes with 'Moulin,' a thriller revolving around the face off between French Resistance hero Jean Moulin and Nazi officer Klaus Barbie.
Read more »




