Unlike his earlier films "Can Dialectics Break Bricks?" and "The Girls of Kamare", which "detourned" drama films, in this one, Viénet uses a great variety of sources (particularly archive footage of People's Republic of China leaders) to compose a political documentary sharply critical of Mao's legacy in China. The title is a reference to the pamphlet "Français, encore un effort si vous voulez être républicains" featured in "Philosophy in the Bedroom" of Marquis de Sade.
A film-détournement biography of Mao Tse-tung in which the life of the recently deceased Great Helmsman is told in his own words, using quotes culled from various Red Guard publications. The rise to power of the film's namesake appears as the inevitable outcome of a dialectical logical. Or so the voice-over might lead one to believe. If the usual practice of détourned films is for the soundtrack to undermine the image, here the reverse occasionally takes place. The images critique Mao's words. They show that which, even in the official visual record of the times, the narrative elides. The film is dedicated to Li Yhi Zhe, the nominal author of a famous Democracy Wall critique of the Maoist state.
In Lausanne, Léon is involved by accident with a small Leninist group and gets to know Léa, a dedicated activist and the group leader's mistress. The police keep a close watch on them and trouble is bound to follow.
Aclamadísimo documental sobre el colaboracionismo francés con las tropas nazis durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Desde 1940 hasta 1944, el Gobierno de Vichy colaboró con los alemanes en la instauración de un régimen que gobernó la Francia ocupada en total sintonía y bajo la influencia de Berlín. Vichy combatió incluso a la propia resistencia francesa, compatriotas que luchaban contra el ejército invasor, lo que le supuso el golpe definitivo para la humillación y vergüenza por parte de los aliados y los propios franceses durante y una vez acabada la guerra. En este documental Marcel Ophüls mezcla imágenes de archivo de la época con entrevistas actuales (en 1969) a oficiales alemanes y resistentes franceses de aquellos años.