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Reunion in France

Reunion in France
Posterreunionusx.jpg
Directed by Jules Dassin
Produced by Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Written by Story:
Leslie Bush-Fekete
Contributing Writer:
Charles Hoffman)
Screenplay by Jan Lustig ()
Marvin Borowsky
Marc Connelly
Starring Joan Crawford
John Wayne
Philip Dorn
Music by Franz Waxman
Cinematography Robert H. Planck
Edited by Elmo Veron
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • December 25, 1942 (1942-12-25)
Running time
102 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1,054,000
Box office $1,863,000

Reunion in France is a 1942 American war film distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starring Joan Crawford, John Wayne, and Phillip Dorn in a story about a woman in occupied France who, learning her well-heeled lover has German connections, aids a downed American flyer. The film was directed by Jules Dassin and Ava Gardner has a tiny role as a Parisian shopgirl.

1940 in Paris, Michele de la Becque (Joan Crawford) is a career woman in love with industrial designer Robert Cortot (Philip Dorn). Together they enjoy a luxurious lifestyle unfazed by the approach of World War II. After the Battle of France and subsequent German occupation, Michele discovers her lover is socializing with German officers and his plants are manufacturing weapons for them. She confronts him and he does not deny her evidence. She is outraged. She aids a downed American in the Eagle Squadron of the Royal Air Force bomber pilot Pat Talbot (John Wayne) from Pennsylvania and finds herself falling in love with him. Later, she discovers Cortot is turning out defective weapons for the Germans and organizing a French fighting force. Michele is happily reunited with Cortot.

The film made $1,046,000 in the US and Canada and $817,000 elsewhere, earning MGM a profit of $222,000.

Film Daily noted, "The film, directed capably by Jules Dassin, has been given a first-rate production by Joseph L. Mankiewicz."

T.S. in The New York Times observed, "If Reunion in France is the best tribute that Hollywood can muster to the French underground forces of liberation, then let us try another time. [The film] ... is ...simply a stale melodramatic exercise for a very popular star. In the role of a spoiled rich woman who finds her "soul" in the defeat of France, Joan Crawford is adequate to the story provided her, but that is hardly adequate to the theme."

Years after making the film, Joan Crawford was quoting as saying this about Reunion in France: "Oh God. If there is an afterlife and I am to be punished for my sins, this is one of the pictures they'll make me see over and over again. John Wayne and I both went down for the count, not just because of a silly script but because we were so mismatched. Get John out of the saddle and you've got trouble."


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