

A man returns from deportation and demolishes a bell tower with an axe. French rural drama hits different.
Jean-Baptiste Rousse, nicknamed Noble Coeur, a journeyman carpenter in a village in Bigorre, was deported in 1942. On his return, he realizes that his compatriots have let the wood reserves on his building site be stolen. After an altercation with the mayor, he decides to take justice into his own hands and, with the help of his son Roland, cuts down the trees in the communal forest to pay him back. The mayor alerts the police. Noble Coeur takes refuge in the bell tower and, when the mayor refuses to let him bring in his wood, he demolishes it with an axe.
Acting
Daniel Ivernel's simmering, wounded dignity carries every scene.
Direction
Vergez and Ivernel let silences do the screaming.
Cinematography
Bigorre's harsh beauty mirrors the protagonist's isolation.
Director
Raoul Vergez
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Bigorre's rural communities were deeply scarred by WWII deportations; the film captures real regional trauma rarely depicted in French cinema of the era.
Director Vicky Ivernel was Daniel Ivernel's wife; the son Roland is played by their actual son Philippe Ogouz, making this a family-produced reckoning with inherited wounds.