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Zero for Conduct

Play trailer Zero for Conduct Released Feb 15, 1946 47m Comedy Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
94% Tomatometer 17 Reviews 79% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
Controversial in France for its depiction of an educational system in crisis, this film focuses on a group of boys who are fed up with their overzealous repressive teachers. Colin (Gilbert Pruchon), Caussat (Louis Lefebvre) and fellow classmates are aware that their school is planning a shindig, but they're not of a mind to cooperate. Frustrated by the scolding and punishment doled out by their teachers, the boys come up with a plan to interfere with the event.

Critics Reviews

View All (17) Critics Reviews
Jonas Mekas Village Voice Those faces of children in Zero for Conduct! In no other film have I seen faces like these. Those eyes, those motions, those smiles, those countenances, always ready for mischief. May 2, 2024 Full Review Geoff Andrew Time Out Vigo's anarchic, disorienting vision of life in a French boarding school. Feb 9, 2006 Full Review A.H. Weiler New York Times These amorphous scenes, strung together by a vague continuity may be art but they are also pretty chaotic. Rated: 2.5/5 May 20, 2003 Full Review Brian Susbielles InSession Film I’ve gotten a better understanding of Vigo’s vision and where he got the inspiration to be inventive with his camera... Mar 6, 2023 Full Review James Agee The Nation It is hard for me to imagine how anyone with a curious eye and intelligence can fail to be excited by it, for it is one of the most visually eloquent and adventurous movies I have seen. Jun 28, 2021 Full Review Mattie Lucas From the Front Row A work that doggedly refuses to be categorized, seemingly existing within a child's imagination, both vibrantly youthful and disarmingly wise. Rated: 4/4 Jul 6, 2019 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Leaburn O Comedy has come along way in the past 90 years. Mercifully short but still a labour to get through. Watched it on YouTube. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 01/16/24 Full Review Matthew B Jean Vigo is one of the lost geniuses of French cinema. He died prematurely at the age of 29 from tuberculosis leaving behind only three hours of filmed work. These productions were made on a low budget at a time when talking pictures were still in their infancy. The result of this is that his works are a little ragged. The sound quality in Zero for Conduct is poor, and many of the scenes would have looked much better if he had the money and technology to make something more professional. Then again, the anarchist moviemaker might have preferred a less finished touch to his works. Still Vigo did the best that he could. If he employed non-professional actors and people he found on the street, this was not an early example of a director straining for neorealism. In fact Zero for Conduct is closer to the surrealism of a Buñuel than the naturalism of a Rossellini or de Sica. No, the amateur cast are the mark of a man working on the cheap. For this film, Vigo drew on his own experiences of life at boarding school. The authoritarian rules were anathema to Vigo, and he sought to show the pupils rebelling against that. The title refers to a school rule which said that if any pupil got a zero for conduct, he would not be allowed to go out of the school on Sunday. Vigo takes an anarchistic view of the pupils, seeing them as victims of an overbearing establishment against which they rebel. At the time this short and modest work was highly controversial. It was met with hisses and boos by early audiences, and was criticised by a Catholic journal. Zero for Conduct was thought to be vulgar and scatological. In fact there is only a brief use of a repeated swear word, the mildest hint of nudity, and perhaps a little implied homosexuality. As a result, Zero for Conduct was banned in France until the end of World War 2. It was thought to be anti-French, and to be advocating indiscipline. It says something about French society before the war that discipline was rated so highly. Since then the film's stature has grown. François Truffaut was influenced by the film when he made The 400 Blows. Later Lindsay Anderson made If…, another anarchic school film which ends in a similar manner to Zero for Conduct, but taken to greater extremes. Whatever Vigo's contemporaries might have thought, there has been an increasing warmth over time towards the idea of children rebelling against their teachers. It says something about Vigo's attitude towards boarding school life that he based the personalities of the teachers on those of guards at a juvenile prison that his father attended. Strictly speaking, the teachers are not the worst tyrants that we have ever seen in fiction. The oppression faced by the children is mild enough, but still insidious. What is wrong with school life, in Vigo's opinion, is the stifling level of conformity, and the suppression of the individual. In line with this rebellious content, Vigo uses a subversive cinematic style. Zero for Conduct is not a surrealist movie as such, but it certainly contains surreal elements. A mirror reflection moves out of synch with the teacher standing in front of it. A drawing of a teacher turns into an animation, and then transforms into Napoleon. Camera trickery is employed to make a football disappear. A boy and girl engage in a bizarre courting ritual. Many of the visiting VIPs at the end are life-size dummies. The heart of Vigo's message is one of valuing spontaneity, freedom and fun over discipline, conformity and uniformity. Vigo uses the school as a microcosm for society as a whole, which he sees as a place where a strong minority impose their will over a less powerful majority. When the pupils hoist a flag of revolution, this is perhaps what Vigo would like to see happen in society. While Zero for Conduct is certainly rough around the edges, it is a bold and imaginative work that was ahead of its time. It is a pity Vigo did not live longer and have more opportunities to work with a bigger budget. I wrote a longer appreciation of Zero for Conduct on my blog page if you would like to read more: https://themoviescreenscene.wordpress.com/2022/04/21/zero-for-conduct-1933/ Rated 5 out of 5 stars 09/28/23 Full Review A R The most apt description I've heard describes this as a 'hymn to anarchism' - it really is more of a hymn than a story. It's bleak setting is constantly covered with an air of whimsy and childish jubilance, which ultimately triumphs. Some of the shots are also just beautiful. If you can appreciate film as art, you can love this film. If you're looking for a narrative and clear story, you may want to skip this one. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 08/19/23 Full Review Christopher B While some critics complain of Zero de Conduite being filmed chaotic, It's this sense of chaos that portrays the literal chaos in the film. One of the earliest and most influential films about children and anarchy, Zero de Conduite inspired countless Directors and films. The two most notable and acclaimed being The 400 Blows and If...., both of which are masterpieces. Anarchy is at the core of Vigo's beliefs and films, this being the most literal adaptation and one so revolutionary that it was banned until 1945. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 11/02/22 Full Review isla s This film is like a mix of Oliver Twist and St. Trinians (only its French film of course, a relatively short one at 50 minutes). It has some quite amusing moments - there's slapstick style comedy present with a rather pompous teacher shown being quite strict and appearing to have a very silly walk around school kids. The children are depicted as quite scheming and I enjoyed seeing them come up with a plan to get back at those who are unfairly harsh on them. Its hardly original but this is a very old film and at only 50 minutes long, it doesn't entirely outstay its welcome. A pretty entertaining watch with some funny moments, yes I'd recommend this, although there are some less interesting scenes, overall its quite amusing and entertaining enough to pass the time, I reckon. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member With this enchanting 44-minute vignette, Vigo delights and stuns us as he unabashedly demonstrates his penchant for melding work of great poignancy, humor and abstraction. In buoyant spirits we relish the chaotic antics of boarding school life, replete with a strikingly original surrealist flair prefiguring the best works of Bunuel. Our amazement ever invites the somber contemplation of what might have been had the world of cinema not lost one of its preeminent creative voices so tragically prematurely. Within the film's rudimentary jumble of conceptual elements, we see an emerging artist developing and refining his identity with a rapidity suggesting the foresight that a flame may at least burn brightly if it is destined to burn out early. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/14/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Zero for Conduct

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Movie Info

Synopsis Controversial in France for its depiction of an educational system in crisis, this film focuses on a group of boys who are fed up with their overzealous repressive teachers. Colin (Gilbert Pruchon), Caussat (Louis Lefebvre) and fellow classmates are aware that their school is planning a shindig, but they're not of a mind to cooperate. Frustrated by the scolding and punishment doled out by their teachers, the boys come up with a plan to interfere with the event.
Director
Jean Vigo
Genre
Comedy
Original Language
Canadian French
Release Date (Theaters)
Feb 15, 1946, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Nov 27, 2018
Runtime
47m