Saint-Ex

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Saint-Ex
London Film Festival
  • 17 November 1996 (1996-11-17)
[1]
BBC Two
  • 25 December 1996 (1996-12-25)
[2][3]
Running time
82 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Saint-Ex is a 1996 British

Frank Cottrell Boyce
, while the writer's sons, Aidan and Joseph, portrayed the Saint-Exupéry brothers, François and Antoine, as children.

Plot

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (Bruno Ganz), growing up in an aristocratic French family, chooses to become a pilot. To the dismay of his family, young Antoine leaves to take a job flying airmail overseas.

Antoine marries beautiful Consuelo (Miranda Richardson), and they set up house in Casablanca. The constant strain on their marriage from his dangerous flights results in Consuelo leaving and going to Paris. Antoine goes after her, they reconcile, but he refuses to give up flying even when he is almost killed when he crashes in an attempt to break the Paris-Saigon air record.

By the late 1930s, Antoine becomes a successful airmail pilot flying in Europe, Africa and South America. During this period, he became a writer, with his most famous work being The Little Prince.

At the outbreak of

Free French Air Force in North Africa. In July 1944, while flying an F-5 Lightning on a reconnaissance mission
over the Mediterranean, Antoine mysteriously disappears.

Cast

Production

Saint-Ex was filmed and distributed in the United Kingdom. The film was director Anand Tucker's feature film debut, and combines elements of biography, documentary and dramatic re-creation.[5] The use of period documentary interviews in black-and-white is interspersed with live action and optical effects generated on film in colour.[1]

Reception

Saint-Ex was reviewed by Derek Elley for Variety: "Reach falls short of ambition in 'Saint-Ex,' an intriguing attempt to create a cinematic tone-poem to legendary French flyer-cum-novelist Antoine de Saint-Exupéry that only rarely gets both wheels off the ground. Despite some striking visuals and an evident desire to take a fresh look at the biopic genre, the movie remains strangely uninvolving for much of the time and isn't helped by a miscast Bruno Ganz as the titular aviator. Theatrical prospects look fog-bound."[1]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Elley, Derek. "Review: ‘Saint-Ex’." Variety, 24 November 1996. Retrieved: 17 December 2015.
  2. ^
    ISSN 0033-8060
    . Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Bookmark: Saint-Ex". BFI Collections. 25 December 1996. Archived from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  4. ^ Brennan, Sandra. "Overview: 'Saint-Ex'." The New York Times. Retrieved: 17 December 2015.
  5. ^ Allon et al. 2001, p. 334.

Bibliography

  • Allon, Yoram, Del Cullen and Hannah Patterson. Contemporary British and Irish Film Directors: A Wallflower Critical Guide (Wallflower Critical Guides). London: Wallflower, 2001. .

External links