Vaincre ou mourir (2022) - full transcript

The heroic life of Charette, a noble, whom the Vendée peasants came to seek to fight the Republican Revolutionaries, to defend their land, their faith, their sons and their religion.

---

- The French Revolution

is a rupture

in the history of humanity.

Forever,

there will be the before and the after.

- The Revolution is

favorably received.

Vendée does not stand out

among the rest of the kingdom.

There is much hope in

the promised reforms.

Promises are put into writing

in grievance notebooks,

which are requested from every parish,

every corporation.

- Soon enough,

people will be disappointed

and will take up arms

against the French Revolution.

- The rebellion breaks out everywhere,

very violently.

- It's a spontaneous movement,

a popular movement

that organizes fairly quickly.

It's astonishing

in this war of Vendée.

There is a rapid organization

around, for example, recognized leaders.

In one week,

we see things getting organized.

So obviously,

the first thing,

we see in uprisings

under the old regime,

is to seek out

people whom we trust.

People who are known before,

in the village,

because they held

important political positions,

because they have charisma.

We seek them out because we need

to trust these leaders.

- François-Athanase Charette

de La Contrie

is the most well-known Vendean leader.

He held out the longest.

He was called the king of Vendée.

- Charette is a rebel.

Yes, and he's a rebel

who achieves successes,

who also experiences failures

and who is extremely conscious

of the limits of his power,

the limits of his action.

- Vendée is a big question mark.

Why Vendée?

How Vendée?

Why did it come to this?

- Vendée is a human story,

of men.

It's a story of heroism,

of commitment.

- Charette was the ultimate hero.

The reference.

Charette is also about honor.

Honor.

Cries and protests in the distance.

---

Scream

Intriguing music

Deep breath

- My heart still beats.

---

Yet tomorrow,

I will be dead.

I am far from being a saint.

But I will not go to hell.

For I have come from hell.

They have turned Vendée into hell.

---

That summer, I

see nothing coming.

The Revolution promises a better world,

we only talk about freedom and equality.

I fought for freedom,

in America, during the War of Independence.

My name is François-Athanase

Charette de La Contrie.

I spent my entire career as

an officer in the Royal Navy.

On the seas of the world,

in the heat of battles.

The Revolution overturns my life.

I am only 30 years old

and have no future.

Do you see what you have

around your neck?

It's the archangel Saint Michael.

It means you are well protected.

You will become a great knight. Right?

Good blood cannot lie.

Right, my son?

- My poor friend, nothing remains

of your knighthood.

Do you see this?

- No, what?

- This distaff

hanging on our door.

Do you know what it means?

The reward of the cowards.

Of those who dare not

arm themselves against the Revolution.

Of those who prefer hunting

and chasing skirts.

I am leaving for Nantes tomorrow.

Will you come?

Woodcocks.

And a distaff.

These are the trophies that the knight

Charette will leave to history.

- The peasants

are beginning to lose hope.

After the fine promises,

the Revolution brings threats.

Priests who refuse

to swear allegiance to the Constitution

are hunted down.

They hide to celebrate Mass.

Helplessly, I watch

our world collapsing.

And this is only the beginning.

The Republic sends

our king Louis XVI to the scaffold.

His beheading causes

a shockwave throughout Europe.

Revolutionary France

is overwhelmed on all fronts.

It needs cannon fodder.

That's the spark

that ignites the gunpowder.

- Fire!

- The National Convention

has decreed the conscription of 300,000 men

to fight on the eastern border

against the enemies of liberty.

Protests

- We don't want

your liberty!

---

- PEACE!

- No!

War!

War is Europe

of crowned tyrants.

In Coblenz, in Mainz,

everywhere.

- Where is this, Mainz?

Why should I die fighting

against enemies I don't know?

Protests

- What greater honor

than to shed one's blood

for the homeland?

The conscripted citizens

will be selected by drawing lots.

- NO!

- Leave our sons on our fields.

We need hands, lads.

Cheers

- The Republic

has no need for harvests

when the army of tyrants

threatens to trample liberty.

That liberty

which France has planted on its soil

and which it must sow

throughout the world.

- Well spoken.

They are being booed.

---

- Come, my son.

Please.

- Sworn priest.

Join the devil,

you serve the good God no more.

Protests

Give us back our good priests!

---

- Usher, proceed with the drawing.

- NO!

- Black ball, conscripted.

White ball, exempt.

Discontented exclamations

- I call

Citizen Germain Goulard.

- He's my son.

He's a municipal officer.

He's exempt, my son.

Everyone contributes to the Republic.

We need soldiers...

and men of the law.

Protests

- Silence! Enough!

Usher, continue.

---

- I call Citizen Jacques Maupillier.

- No, not my son!

Leave him alone!

Gunshot

- Jacques! He's hit!

- Jacques! Jacques!

Jacques!

Tragic music

---

Cry of rage

Be cursed!

Cursed! I curse you all!

- Thousands of peasants

gather

to take up arms

and defend

what they hold dearest.

Their sons,

their faith,

their king.

- Dad!

Bell ringing

---

- On their chests,

they wear the Sacred Heart of Jesus

as protection,

a rallying sign.

These lads are tough.

But facing the soldiers

of the Republic,

the Blues,

as they call them,

they need officers

to lead them.

I knew sooner or later

they would come for me.

I wasn't prepared.

- Come out, Charette.

- Charette!

Charette!

We know you're there!

- Show yourselves.

Muffled cries

---

- You cannot ignore them.

You must speak to them.

- Tell them what?

That their fight is futile?

That they have gone mad?

Soon,

they will have an army against them.

Do you think they can resist

with their pitchforks and scythes?

A riot is one thing.

War is another.

- They are asking for you.

They need a leader.

A leader who knows

the art of war.

- I am a sailor.

War on land...

Especially against armies

that defy all of Europe.

They will make short work

of a band of farmers.

It's sheer madness.

Clamor

- Come on, follow me.

Where is he?

Search every room.

Look everywhere.

Where is he hiding?

- He's not here.

He's out hunting.

- Hunting?

- Look at what's left

of the knight Charette.

He has fled, that nobleman.

- We don't want his boot,

but his head.

The crowd is in a frenzy.

---

- We will eventually find him.

- No courage, these pale faces.

This Charette is a coward.

- Who are you calling a coward?

Wait for me outside.

Dramatic music

---

In my family,

we have paid the blood tax

for centuries.

It's a duty.

And an honor.

---

We must fulfill it with panache.

I want to be that man.

I want to be the man of panache.

- So be it.

I will be your leader.

But let things be clear.

When I give orders,

they will be obeyed.

I expect loyalty

and fidelity from you.

If you want to fight,

you must be ready

to make all sacrifices.

Even the sacrifice of your life.

I swear before you

here in Fonteclose,

to return only dead or victorious.

Do you swear

to follow me to the end?

- YES!

YES! YES!

Intense music

- Loyal to each other.

---

- Loyal to each other.

---

For God.

And for the king.

- LONG LIVE THE KING! LONG LIVE THE KING!

---

- Peasants are coming from all over

to fight by my side.

Among my most loyal,

Jean-Baptiste René de Couëtus,

a former officer

in the royal army.

I make him my right-hand man.

And the young Prudent de La Robrie,

a hothead.

I entrust him with the command

of the cavalry.

The Abbot Remaud,

my confessor, my confidant.

And the chaplain of my army.

And then,

there are my amazons.

At first, I am just

a gang leader among others.

South of the Loire,

a great army is forming.

It takes the name

of the Catholic and Royal Army.

They are our brothers in arms.

But for the Republic,

we are bandits.

Heroic music

---

- The Blues

have 4,000 men

around Challans.

- We are

outnumbered in soldiers,

outnumbered in weaponry. In short,

outnumbered altogether.

- Except in courage.

I can't wait to skewer those peasants.

- We'll see what remains

of our courage

when the Blues start firing.

- Armed and with faith in our hearts,

God will guide us.

- Prudent,

you don't live up to your name.

Faith is not a shield

against gunfire.

- General.

Faith may not save

our bodies,

but it will surely save our souls.

- Well, Abbot,

bless these souls tomorrow

before the battle.

You will form the line

and await my command.

- At your orders.

- Prudent.

You will lead the cavalry

and charge at my signal.

- At your orders, General.

- And me?

What will be my role?

- Gentlemen, this is my neighbor.

The Countess

Adélaïde de La Rochefoucauld.

- I come to fight.

- Fight you?

Come on,

I know you're fearless, but...

it wouldn't be chivalrous

to lead a lady to the slaughter.

That's what awaits us.

- Only God knows what awaits us.

Keep your chivalry

for better days.

- Let's be serious,

the Blues are already mocking us

for facing peasants.

What will they say

when they see soldiers in skirts?

- I salute your courage,

but I highly doubt

that your beautiful attire

will be useful in the heat of battle.

- I am prepared

with many other charms

to pay my respects to the Blues.

- We need soldiers.

Fine, but you will remain

behind the lines.

- My place is closest to the fire.

Whether you like it or not.

Intense music

---

- On that morning,

the Blues face us

with their cannons.

---

For my men,

it's their baptism by fire.

---

The clash is terrible.

---

The peasants flee

at the first shots.

Those who remain

are cut to pieces.

---

I am a sailor.

This is my first war on land,

and the plain

does not swallow the corpses.

---

What do I look like now?

The armies of Anjou and Poitou

treated us with contempt.

- What's at stake

is the success of our cause.

We need more soldiers.

- Let's unite

with the Catholic and Royal Army.

- For the other generals,

I'm just a naval cadet.

- Strengthen

our cavalry and charge

without faltering this time.

- I've said it before,

you can't fight cannons

with pitchforks!

Dark music

---

Courage is not enough.

---

We need to change tactics.

Suspenseful music

---

Let's reject the war

as the Blues impose it on us.

They are not from this land.

We are.

---

The bocage will be our fortress.

The hedges will be our harrows,

the enemy will collide with them.

Let's make them leave

the main roads.

Let's lure them into the paths,

let them get stuck

in the ruts.

Let's stay on the lookout.

Lying in wait. Everywhere

and nowhere. Invisible

and unpredictable.

Pounce on the prey

like a falcon

to break their line.

Harass them, entangle them.

Take the loot and leave.

- Like pirates.

- Like corsairs.

Tense music

Observe from afar.

---

Take the artillery

and the supplies.

- Move!

Go.

- And what about them?

- Cut them to pieces

to avenge our brothers.

- The Blues show no mercy.

- You can't be serious.

- A gentleman

does not massacre his prisoners.

Swear

to no longer bear arms

against Vendée.

And you will be spared.

- Go home.

The Republic

will not relent

until you trample the faith

of our fathers.

- Shave their heads

to recognize them.

- Sir,

your clemency honors you.

- It won't always be like this.

Pfeiffer.

- I stay in Vendée.

To fight by your side.

- Who are you?

- My name is Pfeiffer.

72nd infantry regiment.

Let me serve

under your command.

You won't regret it.

- The future will tell

if I did the right thing sparing you.

Pfeiffer.

Maupillier, Couëtus,

forward!

- Come on, move. Let's go!

- Come on, hurry up. Go!

Soft music

---

- It's a full moon, my friends!

To your health, to your health.

- Hey, captain!

- Gentlemen,

this cannon suits you perfectly.

- And it's just the first one.

- I hope so.

Gentlemen, ladies.

You've had too much to drink.

Festive music

---

- Come on, my friend. Have a drink!

You almost died today.

- I would have bled you

like a pig.

- It's better to be the butcher

than the victim.

- Instead of arguing,

let's get drunk.

- To CHARETTE!

- My sons, my sons.

The music stops.

My sons.

Above all, let us thank heaven

for this victory.

Let us give thanks.

- Come on, abbé.

There is a time for everything. Tonight,

I want joy

to reign in my camp.

Let's drink.

Let's drink all night and dance!

The music resumes.

We'll settle it in confession.

- My brother!

- My little Marie-Anne.

- I've heard about your victories.

Pornic, Pont-James, Legé.

- The hardest part is yet to come.

Tonight,

the time is for celebration, my sister.

---

- It's a true beauty.

- Oh, my friend, it's her sister.

- And who is she?

- Our Amazon.

- Venus of our god Mars!

- Would you grant me this dance?

- I grant it to you.

- I saw you in action

during the assault.

I didn't know you had such spirit.

- Am I impressing you?

- Always.

- The Republic took everything,

I have nothing left to lose.

- Oh, really?

I have much to lose.

Especially you.

- I don't belong to you, knight.

---

- And who is she?

- She, Céleste Bulkeley,

the Irishwoman.

- An Irishwoman?

- No, an Angevin.

She married an Irish nobleman.

- As long

as she marries all of us.

- Let's hope she wields

the sword just as well.

Applause

- You command an army.

I want to fight with you.

- Do you want to embrace

lost causes?

- I embrace whatever I please.

- Then let's embrace victory.

TO VICTORY!

- TO VICTORY!

Everyone repeats.

---

Upbeat music

- In the spring of 1793,

all of Vendée is in flames.

We soar from victory to victory.

Torrents of volunteers

pour into the countryside.

The major cities of the west

fall.

Saumur, Cholet, Angers.

I begin to dream.

But alas, the momentum of our victories

is shattered

against the ramparts of Nantes.

The assault turns into a disaster.

Gunshots Screams

Nantes has held, fine.

- The Vendéens

have given us the high ground.

- They know nothing

about the art of war.

- Charette still resists.

They are preparing a new assault.

Nantes wants an end to this.

Solemn music

---

15,000 heavily armed

elite soldiers.

The clash takes place on September 19

on the hills of Torfou.

---

- Soldiers, halt!

- The Vendéens

have given us the heights.

- They know nothing

about the art of war.

- Charette still resists.

They are preparing a new assault.

- Join the army.

No quarter, no prisoners.

Intriguing music

---

- My friends,

we are the last bastions

of a monarchy of 1,000 years.

And against us,

the storm of History rages.

The army facing us

is said to be the best in the world.

But these soldiers,

we can defeat them!

For our cause is just

and your heart is pure!

If you flee,

all is lost.

If you stay united,

if you stand as one, together,

we are a family.

Together, we are an idea.

Together,

we are immortal.

It will be on this land of Torfou,

on this land soaked

with the enemy's blood,

that the lilies will bloom again.

It is here

that we will conquer

or die.

Charette launches the assault.

Poignant music

---

- Artillery.

Fire!

Charge.

---

Beaupuy, the right flank!

---

Retreat, Beaupuy!

- Retreat! Retreat!

---

- Our flank has been attacked

by Bonchamps.

- Where do they come from?

Where did these brigands

learn to fight?

- General.

Reform the ranks.

- Sound the retreat.

- Do not flee before these scoundrels!

- General,

the battle is lost.

Limit the losses.

- General.

Dreamy music

---

- Unexpected victory.

Unfortunately,

the bulk of the Mayence army

managed to retreat in good order.

Instead of pushing our advantage,

we divide our forces

at the moment when we could

change the course of history.

We will pay dearly for it.

Just a month later,

the Blues take

a crushing revenge at Cholet.

The Vendéen generals

rely on external aid.

They decide

to take a port in Brittany

to encourage an English landing.

A human tide crosses the Loire

in a panic.

This is the beginning of a long exodus

into the unknown.

It is madness.

As for me,

I remain in Vendée.

They have all gone.

She too.

It is said of me

that I am a traitor.

That I should have embarked

in that exodus.

But I know that history

will be decided here,

on the land of our fathers.

After several weeks of hope,

their expedition turns into a nightmare.

Starved, ravaged by diseases,

our brothers are massacred

in the marshes of Savenay.

The great Catholic and royal army is annihilated.

Henceforth,

I am alone facing the enemy.

They send a new executioner

for the Vendée to Nantes.

Jean-Baptiste Carrier.

A scavenger.

- The law encourages us

to dispense justice without faltering.

If means are lacking,

we will find them.

If the guillotine is not enough,

we will eliminate the enemies

of freedom with gunfire.

If we must conserve powder,

we will drown them in the Loire.

I have full power

to enforce the laws

which provide for

the extermination of the brigands.

The brigands,

those who support them,

and those who cannot justify

their patriotic ardor.

The lukewarm,

the moderates, the defeatists!

It is with their blood

that we will cement the Republic.

- In Nantes,

the guillotine is working at full capacity.

To speed up the process,

they drown women, old people,

and children in the Loire.

In one winter,

thousands of innocents

perish in that river

which Carrier nicknames

the national bathtub.

The Terror

rages against my loved ones,

Couëtus's wife,

Prudent's parents.

Even my little cousins,

the youngest of whom is 17.

They will all pass through the scaffold.

Dramatic music

Cries

- Ready, aim.

Fire!

- The war is lost.

However,

Vendée has not yet seen anything.

It enters its great martyrdom.

The Republic wants to exterminate us

in our homes.

It calls us a cursed race.

General Turreau's plan is adopted.

To crisscross Vendée

with 12 incendiary columns

with orders to burn everything.

We call them

the Infernal Columns.

Thousands of soldiers

descend upon our villages.

Everywhere, they bring the sword,

the fire.

Dramatic music

- My darling, my love.

Take Joséphine with you.

Run into the forest. Hide yourself.

Run as fast as you can.

I love you, my darling. Go.

Go, run. Run, darling.

---

- Men are nailed

to the doors of barns.

Women are raped, slaughtered.

Some are burned alive

or thrown into wells.

Children

are killed with bayonets

in their mothers' arms.

- Slaughter them!

- Look at him!

- Let's put an end to these dogs.

Dark music

---

- The unspeakable.

Muffled screams

The unthinkable.

Everywhere,

death.

Muffled cries

---

Melancholic music

---

Their columns

have not had the desired effect.

The survivors

have nothing left to lose.

By the thousands, they join me,

furious in their hearts.

Vendée rises from its ashes.

In the labyrinth

of the hollow paths,

we continue our ambushes.

We achieve some victories.

The Blues,

like us, are out of breath.

Tense music

---

- Charette and his men

have set fire

to the Roullière camp.

- After having burned

all of Vendée,

now it is setting us on fire.

- Charette has been defying us

for months.

With 3,000 men and no

artillery. He is everywhere.

Nowhere and everywhere.

- We must put an end to Charette.

The Terror has failed.

Worse, it has strengthened him.

- Do you think

we should be lenient?

- What if we try compromise?

- Negotiate with these brigands?

- You must be kidding?

A compromise will be seen

as a betrayal.

- Not if it aims

to deceive the enemy.

It's time to rebuild our strength,

to attack better tomorrow.

If you want war,

prepare for peace.

- What do you propose, Citizen Ruelle?

- Amnesty for the brigands

and a peace treaty,

but on our terms.

The Vendéens want to return

to their homes and cultivate their land.

They will accept it.

- Charette will never accept.

He has vowed to fight

until death.

- Not if we let him believe

that he is in a position of strength.

- Do you think the Convention

would support your initiatives?

- Oh...

Probably not officially.

But unofficially, perhaps.

If Vendée lays down its arms,

the Convention will know

to turn a blind eye

to certain principles.

- We need to find an intermediary.

Someone close.

Charette is suspicious of everyone.

- He's not wrong.

We are betrayed

only by our own.

Isn't that right,

Citizen Bureau de La Batardière?

- I know

who can lead us to Charette.

Calming music

---

- Athanase!

---

I was so scared.

- How is my son?

Dramatic music

---

- General.

I am Citizen Bureau de La Batardière.

I come to negotiate with you.

On behalf of Deputy Ruelle.

- Bureau de La Batardière.

A nobleman.

- The Republic welcomes

all men of goodwill.

Too much blood has been shed,

don't you think?

- Our blood.

Our blood more than yours.

You have no choice.

You're just buying time.

- The Republic wants peace.

Don't let this chance slip away.

- Peace.

Peace.

They want peace.

At what price?

I don't know your conditions,

but I guess they are unacceptable.

- Amnesty.

Free exercise of worship.

The right to keep your armies,

the return of your properties.

- In exchange for what?

- The Republic has only one condition.

That Vendée fully recognizes

the legitimacy of the new

form of government of France.

- Its legitimacy.

- Let's take a few steps, General.

I have an offer to make you.

- I don't like whisperings

without a priest.

- The Republic promises

what it doesn't have.

- We have an agreement, General?

- You have my word.

And I have yours.

The agreement will be concluded

when the word

is kept.

- I will convey your response

to Deputy Ruelle.

He will be happy

to announce to the Convention

that peace is soon to be achieved

in Vendée.

- The future will tell.

Intriguing music

---

- What are you thinking?

- That life plays tricks on me.

It tears away my son.

And asks me

to save someone else's child.

- Whom are you talking about?

- No one.

Enigmatic music

---

(- Knight. Knight.)

(Knight.)

(Wake up.)

- The peace treaty grants

to the pacified territory of Vendée

complete freedom of the Catholic faith,

financial compensation

for homes destroyed by the war,

exemption from service

in the armies of the Republic

and the withdrawal of Republican troops

stationed in Vendée.

In exchange for... - It is a state

within the state that we concede to them.

- In exchange for,

the entire population of Vendée

fully and unconditionally recognizes

the new form of government of France.

The Republic, one and indivisible,

as proclaimed on September 20, 1792.

Here are all the clauses

approved by the National Convention.

...

- One condition is not mentioned.

And it's not insignificant.

- For it to be fulfilled,

this condition must remain confidential.

- Why should we believe you?

- You have my word.

- What is the worth of the word

of a regime that massacred

women, elderly, and children?

- Peace deserves that we forget the past

to build the future.

Dramatic music

---

- Long live peace.

- LONG LIVE PEACE.

LONG LIVE PEACE. LONG LIVE PEACE.

- Know that a Vendéen

never forgets.

Poignant music

---

The day after the La Jaunaye agreements,

a grand celebration of pacification

is organized in Nantes.

Nantes.

The Republican stronghold

that witnessed the Loire

carrying countless corpses.

becomes the symbol of peace.

---

A year ago, to them,

I was the general of the brigands.

Now,

they call me the king of Vendée.

---

Intriguing music

---

- Kill him!

Melancholic music

---

- Was it necessary

to go through this cursed place?

- We must remind them

how the Republic punishes the brigands.

That will discourage them

from taking up arms again.

---

- Am I dealing with

a true republican?

- Am I dealing with

a genuine man of peace?

- Peace is made,

since you accept the Republic.

Isn't that right, citizen?

- Peace will last

as long as the Republic

keeps its promises.

The days turn into weeks.

Weeks turn into months.

Vendée is stuck

in a deceptive peace.

- This condition

must remain confidential.

- Save me.

- Anything can still change.

- Who are you, sir?

- I am Chevalier Athanase

Charette de La Contrie.

I am a Naval officer,

in service to His Majesty,

the King of France.

And you, who are you?

- My name is Louis.

Some say

that I am Louis XVII,

King of France and Navarre.

Some also say

that I am dead.

There's knocking.

The thunder roars.

There's knocking.

- General.

- General,

the Chouans have resumed the fight.

The army of the émigrés will land

with the assistance

of the British fleet.

All of Brittany will rise up.

General,

let's take up arms again.

- I'm waiting for news

from Deputy Ruelle.

- General, why hold on

to the word of that deceiver?

Time is of the essence,

and we waste it on a chimera.

- This chimera, as you call it,

let me tell you what it's about.

Or rather, who it's about.

About the King of France, Louis XVII.

I have their word

that he will be handed over to us,

otherwise, the peace will be broken.

- The Republic isn't so foolish.

They will kill the child king,

just as they killed the royal family.

Athanase.

What will they say about you

when they know you were deceived?

- I take the risk.

This peace is only a truce,

we know it.

When the army of the émigrés

lands, war will be inevitable.

Meanwhile,

if there is the slightest chance

that this liberation may happen,

it is worth trying.

The life of the King of France

is worth more than the reputation

of a provincial gentleman.

What honor does this visit bestow upon me?

- I come,

in accordance with our agreements,

to verify that no gathering

of fighters is taking place.

- We are at peace.

- That's not the feeling

your friends' landing evokes.

- It's peace that motivates you

when you deploy

troops in Vendée?

Come now, Travot.

Why have you come?

- I have a letter

from Deputy Albert Ruelle.

- Finally, he sends news.

I hope it's good news.

Sir.

Tell your superiors

that peace is broken.

Definitely.

- In that case,

we will meet again soon.

On the field of honor.

- Pfeiffer.

Sound the call to arms immediately.

Dramatic music

---

- Louis XVII is dead.

Thrilling music

---

- At the beginning of summer 1795,

The brother of Louis XVI,

the heir to the throne of France,

writes to me.

He acknowledges my military achievements

and appoints me lieutenant general.

My legitimacy is now complete.

- Will this war never end?

- The little king is dead.

The agreements are null.

I will spill every drop of my blood

for the cause.

- Blood, always blood.

Vendée alone cannot fight.

You lead us to death.

- Vendée is no longer alone.

The army of the émigrés has landed.

The Count of Artois will arrive.

- I do not trust the princes.

They are generous with their words,

safely tucked away

in their exile, but

they are sparing with their blood.

I don't want to delude myself

like you with Louis XVII.

- I need you.

- My wife is dead.

And my daughters...

Look.

I don't want them

to be orphans.

- I know.

So, what?

Would you like your wife's death

to be in vain?

For your daughters to grow up

under a regime

that massacred our families?

Would you like

us to have done all this for nothing?

- I want to live.

- What for?

What's the point

of living in dishonor?

I prefer

to die with weapons in hand.

- That's your destiny,

but not mine.

The Republic has made

concessions to La Jaunaye.

- The Republic is too kind.

Concessions, my ass!

They've deceived us

with promises.

- Can't there be peace?

Republicans or royalists,

we have the same homeland.

- Do you understand them now?

- Maybe I'm too old.

- No.

It's their new world

that is old.

We are the youth, my friend.

Yeah.

We are the youth of the world.

Come on.

March with me.

For God.

- AND FOR THE KING.

- Harness the horses.

Grandiose music

---

At the beginning of autumn,

I concentrate my forces on the coast.

I rely on the arrival

of the Count of Artois, the king's brother.

His coming is our last hope

to reclaim the kingdom.

- The prince would take

a great risk by landing.

- Is the risk any less for us?

A prince worthy of his title

must set an example.

- This is a gift from the prince.

- A gift?

"I never yield."

Quite appropriate

on the day he abandons me.

Tell your leaders

that you've just brought me my death warrant.

Today,

I command 15,000 men.

15,000.

Because of them,

tomorrow there will be 1,500 left.

You leave me no choice

but to flee

or seek a glorious death.

Also, tell them that...

Charette will die with weapons in hand.

Why are you doing all this?

You no longer belong to yourself.

For glory?

No.

Battle cry

This fight is bigger than you.

We will become History.

I had no choice.

- You had the choice of forgiveness.

- At Quiberon,

the Blues showed no mercy.

They massacred the prisoners,

despite promises of clemency.

They massacred them.

They must know

that I retaliate blow for blow.

This will be an eye for an eye,

a tooth for a tooth.

- As a friend, I accept it,

but as a priest, I refuse.

We are not like them.

- No.

We are not like them.

War teaches us

to become what we are not.

- This peace offer

has been approved and signed by us.

With your consent,

it will be handed to General Hoche.

- Is that all?

- Continuing the war

has become suicidal.

It is the only way

to preserve our honor.

- How dare you

stand before me

with this rag

and talk to me about honor?

These people have no word,

they will betray you.

They will deceive you

as they deceived me.

To those who wish to return home,

I predict that instead of dying

with weapons in hand,

they will be slaughtered in their beds.

Like cowards.

- General, please.

The men are exhausted.

Why impose on them

an unnecessary sacrifice?

I wonder

how fighters

so brave and valiant

can choose

the path of dishonor?

- Dishonor?

Athanase,

your words exceed your thoughts.

- Let me tell you

what I truly think.

Melancholic music

In a single day, you lose

all the glory earned

during three years of war!

---

- I will prove to you at the first

opportunity that I haven't changed.

- Have no fear,

it won't be long.

---

Shouting

---

Latin Mass

---

---

It's me, you know.

I sent him to his death.

...

Friends,

I release you from the oath

of Fonteclose.

Those who wish to cease

the fight may do so without remorse.

You will keep your honor.

And my esteem.

As for me, I will go all the way.

I owe it to him.

---

My small army still resists.

An army of shadows

haunting the forests and marshes.

- They massacre us

because they bog us down.

They bog us down.

- We strike

with the rage of desperation.

- We are losing ground.

- But my army dwindles

day after day.

The wounded are numerous.

- Bring us bandages.

- Support is scarce.

- Behind!

- He's there!

- We must survive

like beasts.

...

- Why do you persist

in wearing that large white plume?

The enemy

identifies you too easily.

Take it off.

- That's out of the question.

A naval officer does not

give up the honor of being a target.

And without the plume,

what do we have left?

I will not abandon any soldier.

- They have abandoned you.

Those who remain

only think of going home.

The kings of Europe

accept the Republic.

- They killed my son,

I don't forget, I don't forgive.

If you lay down your arms,

you'll have to walk over my heart.

- I intend to negotiate my surrender

with General Gratien.

- I will do nothing to oppose

your decision.

But I warn you, my friend.

The Blues won't treat you

with any favors.

- I'm tired of it too.

We found our good priests.

We no longer have to fight.

Intriguing music

---

- Halt, citizen.

---

- Ready, aim.

Anxious music

- Don't cry, my friend.

Don't cry.

God will take care of our families.

---

- Save the powder.

- Wait.

Not like this.

- The enemy is hiding

in a nearby forest.

They disappear

at the sight of any uniform on the horizon.

- Charette, always Charette.

Always Charette.

A man cannot stand against

the entire Republic.

- I dealt him a heavy blow

three days ago.

The bandits fled,

thinking victory was smiling at us.

They left behind

about thirty dead.

Every day,

his followers abandon him.

Most have laid down their arms.

- As long as Charette

does not surrender,

Vendée remains a threat.

- Charette will never surrender.

Our offers of amnesty and exile

have no effect.

- Is this man invincible?

- He must die.

- His capture

is only a matter of time.

That time will be short.

Charette can no longer escape us.

He's a cornered beast.

Once located,

we will launch a grand hunt.

- How do you plan to locate him?

- We will do as he does.

We will deceive.

- That would be too simple.

Charette is a fox.

He distrusts everyone.

Your soldiers will end up stabbed...

- We must try everything, harass him!

Don't let your prey breathe.

Exhaust your horses,

but capture Charette.

Those are General Hoche's orders,

and I intend to follow them.

- The great manhunt

has begun.

I can no longer leave the forests.

I am hunted day and night.

I am the most wanted man in France.

- They are very close.

Soon we will all be surrounded.

- I know.

Tomorrow, at dawn,

they will attack.

- So, is it over?

- For us, yes.

But our fight is eternal.

Nothing can ever erase it.

Like this flame before me.

It seems to flicker,

but in reality,

it will still illuminate men

for centuries.

- I will follow the light

until death.

Gentle music

---

- It's an order.

The last one I give you.

- Athanase.

- You must live.

---

Go.

---

Abbe.

You will bear witness

to what we have been.

---

Farewell, my Amazon.

Farewell.

---

Gunshots

Go!

Keep going!

- Vendée liberté!

Threatening music

- Go! We'll get him.

- Pfeiffer.

---

Pfeiffer!

On the left.

Growl

Charette growls.

Gunshots

Painful groans

Anxious music

---

Gunfire exchange

- You must live,

General.

Touching music

---

- He's here!

---

He's here!

---

Moaning

- Go, we want to get him.

- HE IS THERE!

Melancholic music

---

- I want him alive.

- ALIVE!

- Come on, come.

---

- That's enough!

Remain dignified, for God's sake!

General.

- If I were to be captured,

I wanted it to be

by a French officer.

I'm glad it's you.

- So much heroism wasted.

- Nothing is wasted.

Never.

Defeated, never!

If you flee, all is lost.

My heart still beats.

Tomorrow, I will be dead.

- Athanase.

- Marie-Anne.

- I will get

the best lawyer.

We will plead your case

with God's help.

- It's not necessary.

It's not necessary, you know it.

I have two last requests.

The first... Listen to me.

The first is to settle my debts.

I don't want to leave

without settling my debts.

The second is to fulfill my debts

towards God.

I want to receive absolution

from one of our priests.

- When they lead you to the square,

the procession will pass through Georges Street.

There is a balcony

above the porch.

The abbot will be there.

You just have to bow your head

to receive absolution.

- I am proud to be your brother.

- And I am proud to be your sister.

I will pray for you.

- Soldier.

I have one last request.

I want to shave

before the execution.

- Impossible.

No prisoner

can have a blade.

He could take his own life.

Only the Republic...

- Let the Republic be reassured,

my religion forbids suicide.

I want to die with dignity,

that's all.

- No coquetry, citizen.

The mass grave is not a ball.

Melancholic music

---

Cries and protests in the distance

Tragic music

---

- Firing squad.

- General.

I have one last favor

to ask of you.

The right

to command the fire myself.

- It's not in the regulations.

- It's been a long time

since we disregarded regulations.

I ask you this favor.

From officer

to officer.

- Granted.

- I will bow my head.

- Firing squad.

Poignant music

---

Farewell,

General.

---

Aim for the heart.

That's where you strike a brave man.

---

At my command.

- Today,

I die standing.

I want to face death.

I'm going to join you,

those I have commanded.

- Take aim.

- Those I have loved.

Those who died

by the roadside.

Without a name, without a grave.

---

What will remain of us?

---

Perhaps it is here

that our story begins.

---

Soft music

---

Grandiose music

---

Subtitling by TITRAFILM

Nothing is lost.

Never.