“The truce was a brief tantalising flash of individual humanity, in a war of bureaucracies, machines and high explosives.”
~ Historian Dan Snow
As our first movie pick for the 2024 holiday season, we again recommend the 2005 war drama Joyeux Noël, a fictionalized account of true events that took place spontaneously in multiple locations during the first Christmas of World War I.
As we wrote when recommending the film in 2022,
“On a battlefront in France, for a few hours during Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, the enemy soldiers [German, British, and French] rediscover the one great factor of unity—their humanity and brotherhood. Among the German soldiers is an opera singer who begins to sing ‘Silent Night’ for his troops; Scottish soldiers hear him and join in with their bagpipes. Soon enough, the music brings the men out of the trenches to meet in the no-man’s-land of the Brotherhood of Man.”
French filmmaker Christian Carion directed the film. Born into a farming family in northern France, Carion’s youth reportedly was marked by both physical reminders of the Great War (unexploded shells) and emotional remnants conveyed through stories of French soldiers’ experiences. However, it was not until a historian shared archival materials with him about the “Christmas truce” events that he encountered the story that became Joyeux Noël. In 2006, the film was nominated for an Oscar in the category of Best Foreign Language Film and also received numerous nominations for France’s César Awards.
Related:
The WW1 Christmas Truce: “The war for that moment, came to a standstill”
The Real Story of the Christmas Truce
Related Solari Reports:
Let’s Go to the Movies: Week of December 12, 2022: Joyeux Noël (Merry Christmas)