The Two Faces of Martin Guerre

In 1556, a man calling himself 'Martin Guerre' had returned to his home village after disappearing without a trace for several years. He lived with Guerre's wife
and son for three years. But he was not Guerre.

On September 16, 1560, in the small French village of Artigat in the foothills of the Pyrenees, an unusually large crowd gathered to witness the execution of a young peasant. He was neither a murderer nor a thief, but a man who had tried to pull off an audacious confidence trick – and had very nearly succeeded.

A born actor, Arnaud had little difficulty in convincing the villagers that he was Martin. How did he fool Bertrande? How could a wife not know that the man she was living with was an impostor? Or did she know?

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From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by MrGhaz.


My exact thoughts Miss Celania. An interesting aside to the movie is that there was a dispute over the 1993 Sommersby screenplay because Warner Bros refused to admit their story was based on the 1983 novel by Natalie Zemon Davis that was based on the actual 1560 story. Warner Bros eventually relented giving credit where credit is due.
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The French movie "The Return of Martin Guerre" came out in 1982. Natalie Davis is credited with a history of the Guerre case, not a novel, in 1983. I thought it was common knowledge that Sommersby was a remake of "The Return of Martin Guerre".
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