Los Angeles Times by Carina Chocano
The uncomplicated humanism of Joyeux Noël, with its Christmas message of peace, feels at once irrefutable and refreshing.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France, Germany, United Kingdom · 2005
Rated PG-13 · 1h 56m
Director Christian Carion
Starring Benno Fürmann, Diane Kruger, Guillaume Canet, Gary Lewis
Genre Drama, History, Music, Romance, War
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
In 1914, World War I — the bloodiest war yet at that point in history — was well under way. But on Christmas Eve, areas of the Western Front called an informal and unauthorized truce where the front-line soldiers peacefully met each other in No Man's Land to pause the carnage for a fleeting moment of brotherhood.
Los Angeles Times by Carina Chocano
The uncomplicated humanism of Joyeux Noël, with its Christmas message of peace, feels at once irrefutable and refreshing.
Joyeux Noël is gritty and disturbing with its extended scenes of war and destruction. It also is emotional, even a touch sentimental.
Joyeux Noël finishes up as no more than a garden-variety tearjerker, neatly packaged for Oscar candidacy. It's not hard to see why the French chose this inoffensive weepie as their nominee for best foreign-language film, when they might have had Jacques Audiard's far superior, if more difficult, "The Beat That My Heart Skipped" or Arnaud Desplechin's "Kings & Queen."
New York Daily News by Jami Bernard
You can't go wrong with an uplifting, anti-war story like this, but director Christian Carion trowels on the schmaltz, and the movie's emphasis on Christian values actually seems to spell doom for solving today's conflicts with the Middle East.
Village Voice by Jessica Winter
Carion is no Jean Renoir, but he does strike an appealingly low key of tender, faintly goofy affinity between the combatants.
A period drama marbled with humor, bold gestures and bittersweet consequences.
Though a painless time-passer, Joyeux Noël ultimately contributes little to the venerable anti-war genre beyond its curious message that to some degree, war is hell because it prevents soldiers from making really neat friends and pen-pals from different counties.
Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer
If audiences are hesitant to believe that the fraternization in this film really happened, it will be because of the storytelling, not the story.
The Hollywood Reporter by Ray Bennett
With a cast of Scottish, German and French actors all speaking their own language, writer-director Christian Carion has fashioned a deeply moving and uplifting piece.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
If the film's sentiments about the madness of war are impeccably high-minded, why then does Joyeux Noël, an Oscar nominee for best foreign-language film, feel as squishy and vague as a handsome greeting card declaring peace on earth?
In this brutal land, a stranger threatens their survival.
Based on a true story, a Priest and a Teacher get stranded in a school in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide.
Aging spinster sisters discover a wounded young man on the beach by their home in a remote fishing village.
A brother and sister flee persecution in Guatemala and journey north, through Mexico and on to the United States.
A secret is not safe if the truth has a witness.
Desperate to succeed?
Control. Alter. Delete.