Review of The Life of Emile Zola (1937) by James-Masaki R — 27 Jun 2011
One of the most watchable old school biopics made, with Paul Muni, everyone has to get over the fact that everyone in France is speaking English. Although if it were made in French it would have been a tad more authentic.
Emile Zola was one of the most influential writers from France, very open minded and forward thinking, which also made him a target of censorship by the government, and also a spokesperson for art and freedom.
Half of the film covers his origin and success, while the second half is mostly a court trial film. Did it deserve all those Oscars? Possibly. It certainly is a spirit lifter, even with the somewhat sad ending, but you can't make up shit like that!
This review of The Life of Emile Zola (1937) was written by James-Masaki R on 27 Jun 2011.
The Life of Emile Zola has generally received positive reviews.
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