Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Now Where Did the 7th Company Get to

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.4
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7.4
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

4/5
Mubi

Produced by
  
Alain Poiré

Music by
  
Henri Bourtayre

Initial release
  
13 December 1973 (France)

Music director
  
Henri Bourtayre

Producer
  
Alain Poiré

6.9/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Robert Lamoureux

Written by
  
Robert Lamoureux

Distributed by
  
Gaumont Film Company

Director
  
Robert Lamoureux

Screenplay
  
Robert Lamoureux

Now Where Did the 7th Company Get to? httpsmediasenscritiquecommedia000012683634

Starring
  
Pierre Mondy Jean Lefebvre Aldo Maccione Erik Colin Robert Lamoureux

Cast
  
Robert Lamoureux, Pierre Mondy, Jean Lefebvre, Aldo Maccione, Pierre Tornade

Similar
  
The Seventh Company, The Seventh Company, La Grande Vadrouille, Les Tontons flingueurs, L'aventure - c'est l'aventure

Now Where Did the 7th Company Get To? (French: Mais où est donc passée la septième compagnie?) is a 1973 French-Italian comedy film directed by Robert Lamoureux. The movie relates the adventures of three French soldiers lost somewhere on the front in May 1940 during the Battle of France.

Contents

Plot

During the Battle of France, while the German forces are spreading across the country, the 7th Transmission Company suffers an air raid near the Machecoul wood, but survive and hide in the wood. Captain Dumont, the company commander, sends Louis Chaudard, Pithiviers and Tassin to scout the area. After burying the radio cable beneath a sandy road, the squad crosses the field, climbs a nearby hill, and takes position within a cemetery. One man cut down the wrong tree for camouflage, pulling up the radio cable and revealing it to the passing German infantry. The Germans cut the cable, surround the woods, and order a puzzled 7th Company to surrender. The squad tries to contact thee company, witness their capture and =run away.

Commanded by Staff Sergeant Chaudard, the unit stops in a wood for the night. Pithiviers is content to slow down and wait for the end of the campaign. The next day, he goes for a swim in the lake, in sight of possible German fighters. When Chaudard and Tassin wake up, they leave the camp without their weapons to look for Pithiviers. Tassin finds him and gives an angry warning, but Pithiviers convinces Tassin to join him in the lake. Chaudard orders them to get out, but distracted by a rabbit, falls into the lake. While Chaudard teaches his men how to swim, two German fighter planes appear, pushing the men out of the water. After shooting down one of the German planes, the French pilot, Lieutenant Duvauchel, makes an emergency landing and escapes before his plane explodes. PFC Pithiviers, seeing the bad shape of one of his shoes, destroys what is left of his shoe sole. Tassin is sent on patrol to get food and a new pair of shoes for Pithiviers. Tassin arrives in a farm, but only finds a dog, so he returns and Chaudard goes to the farm after nightfall. The farmerreturns with her daughter-in-law and Lt Duvauchel, and she welcomes Chaudard. Duvauchel, who is hiding behind the door, comes out upon hearing the news and decides to meet Chaudard's men.

When Chaudard and Duvauchel return to the camp, Tassin and Pithiviers are roasting a rabbit they caught. Duvauchel realizes that Chaudard has been lying and takes command.

The following day, the men leave the wood in early morning and capture a German armored tow truck after killing its two drivers. They originally planned to abandon the truck and the two Nazis in a wood, but instead realized the truck is the best way to disguise themselves and free the 7th company. They put on the Germans' uniforms, recover another soldier of the 7th Company, who succeeded in escaping, and obtain resources from a collaborator who mistook them for Germans.

On their way, they encounter a French Gendarmerie patrol, who appear to be a 5th column. The patrol injures the newest member of their group, a young soldier, and then are killed by Tassin. In revenge, they destroy a German tank using the tow truck's cannon gun.

They planned to go to Paris but are misguided by their own colonel, but find the 7th Company with guards who are bringing them to Germany. Using their cover, they make the guards run in front of the truck, allowing the company to get away. When Captain Dumont joins his Chaudard, Tassin, and Pithiviers in the truck, who salute the German Commander with a great smile.

Casting

  • Jean Lefebvre : PFC Pithiviers
  • Pierre Mondy : Staff Sergent Paul Chaudard
  • Aldo Maccione: PFC Tassin
  • Robert Lamoureux: Colonel Blanchet
  • Erik Colin: Lieutenant Duvauchel
  • Pierre Tornade: Captain Dumont
  • Alain Doutey: Carlier
  • Jacques Marin: The collaborationist
  • Production

  • The film's success spawned two sequels:
  • – 1975 : On a retrouvé la septième compagnie (The Seventh Company Has Been Found) by Robert Lamoureux; – 1977 : La Septième Compagnie au clair de lune by Robert Lamoureux.
  • The story is set in Machecoul woods, but it was actually filmed near Cerny and La Ferté-Alais, as well as Jouars-Pontchartrain and Rochefort-en-Yvelines. The famous grocery scene was filmed in Bazoches-Sur-Guyonne.
  • Robert Lamoureux based this film on his own personal experiences in June 1940 during the war.
  • The final scene with the parachute is based on a true story. The 58 Free France paratroopers were parachuted into Brittany in groups of three, on the night of 7 June 1944 to neutralize the rail network of Normandy Landings in Brittany, two days before.
  • Box office

    The movie received a great success in France reaching the third best selling movie in 1974.

    References

    Now Where Did the 7th Company Get to? Wikipedia