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Closed Caption; Deleted scenes; Interviews with director Norman Jewison and Michael Caine; Commentary with director Norman Jewison; Featurette: "The Making-of The Statement"
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Start
2. Pierre Brossard
3. Defending Himself
4. Annemarie Livi
5. Lunch With Colonel Roux
6. Michael Levy
7. Commissire Vionnet
8. Confession in Cannes
9. Father Patrice
10. Questioning Cardinal Moyne
11. Inspector Cholet
12. The Minister's Advice
13. "I'm Going Public."
14. Dom André
15. "I've Lost Him."
16. Nicole
17. An Audience With His Eminence
18. "Manenbaum Was Not a Jew."
19. The Chevaliers Explained
20. The Search Warrant
21. Max's Safe House
22. Assassin Assassinated
23. Priory De St. Donat
24. The Old Man
25. The Payment Codes
26. Rooftop Escape
27. Statement Delivered
28. The Case Is Closed
A man who has been able to avoid the consequences of his actions for nearly 50 years suddenly finds he must answer pursuers on both sides of the law in this drama, based on the novel by Brian Moore and inspired by a true story. After France fell to German occupation during World War II, the Nazi-controlled Vichy government established a law-enforcement group known as the Milice, who were under the direct control of Nazi authorities. In 1944, Pierre Brossard (George Williams) is one of a handful of Milice officers who round up and execute seven Jewish resistance members in the village of Dombey. After the liberation of France, Brossard is tried and convicted for his crimes, but he manages to escape capture, and years later is pardoned. In 1992, Brossard (now played by Michael Caine) is an elderly man living a quiet life in Provence and modestly supported by fellow veterans of the Vichy regime when he's ambushed and nearly killed by a man whom he learns was a hired killer. Brossard discovers this is hardly his only problem; new legislation will allow Vichy-era war criminals who escaped punishment to be charged and tried again, and Anne Marie Livi (Tilda Swinton), a bright and aggressive French prosecutor, has joined forces with Col. Roux (Jeremy Northam) to bring Brossard, among others, to justice. While Brossard is still being clandestinely assisted by church officials and Vichy sympathizers, he must go on the run to avoid capture, and finds himself hiding from the French police as well as a cadre of underground assassins, whose alliances and purposes are frustratingly unclear. The Statement also stars Charlotte Rampling, Alan Bates, and Frank Finlay. Mark Deming, All Movie Guide