Rebellion (French: L'Ordre et la Morale) is a 2011 French drama film based on actual events, and written / directed by and starring Mathieu Kassovitz.
Rebellion is an account of a real-life hostage drama. When a group of separatist rebels in France’s South Pacific territory of New Caledonia seize 30 gendarmes in 1988, specialist negotiator Philippe Legorjus, is called in at the head of a seven-man GIGN unit to defuse the crisis. He and his men are in turn taken hostage but he is soon released to allow him to serve as mediator between the army chiefs who are planning an assault and the rebel leader Alphonse Dianou.
With a presidential election battle between Francois Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac raging back in France, the fate of the hostages and their captors become a chance for political point-scoring.
Subtitled.
Review
"The French title of this film, Order and Morality, is an ironic statement by filmmaker Mathieu Kassovitz; these are words from the mouth of a French politician who like his peers, wants a politically satisfactory solution to a conflict, regardless of the cost in human lives. The issues canvassed here make the film universally relevant, through the particulars of the violent incident in 1988, when Kanaks attacked a New Caledonian police station.
Much more complex than fiction, this fact based drama explores the deep fractures within the French command over its response. To understand what Kassovitz wants to say, we need to consider this, from his notes to the film as to what touched him most about the story: “How politicians are prepared to sacrifice hostages if it serves their interests. How there is an obvious lack of respect, dialogue and, in a word, intelligence. It resonates with me because, to a lesser extent, it's exactly what's happening in the inner cities. Also, the story has a universal aspect that I find compelling. The way people's resources are pillaged while laws and rules are imposed on them that cannot work in their culture.”
Superbly made in every respect, Rebellion is both a tragic indictment of the French politicians and the army command at the time, as well as a carefully researched document, based in part on the book by the man at the centre of the story, Capitaine Legorjus played with great verve by Kassovitz. Performances are striking and the combat scenes extraordinarily effective.
It has taken Kassovitz several years to get the consent of the families of the Kanaks killed in 1988 before he made the film. But it's timely, since the independence referendum in New Caledonia is to be held in 2014." Urban Cinefile