IMDb
No stars yet
Documentary · 52 min
Ok, Joe ! ou les Mémoires du soldat Guilloux
In August 1944, during the chaotic climate of the Liberation, American GIs committed rapes and murders against French civilians. The U.S. Army set up a court-martial to try them. Almost by chance, it hired the writer Louis Guilloux as an interpreter. Little by little, the novelist discovered that only African-American soldiers were sentenced, often to death. He recounts this in a short story: "Okay, Joe!" By comparing his account with historical reality and the recollections of witnesses and descendants, this documentary reveals several taboos of World War II: the atrocities committed by the U.S. Army against civilians, the rape of women, racial segregation, and the cruel and selective punishments it inflicted on its Black soldiers. The film tells a little-known side of World War II.
Sign in and build your archive. The best notes get written right after the credits roll.
Sign in → top right
No streaming info for United States at the moment.
IMDb
No stars yet
Rotten Tomatoes
The tomato isn't ripe
Metacritic took the day off
TMDB
0.0 /10
0 votes
Letterboxd
Letterboxd didn't respond
Weighted average
0.0/10