Indochine (1992)

  • Year: 1992
  • Released: 23 Dec 1992
  • Country: France
  • Adwords: Won 1 Oscar. 12 wins & 13 nominations total
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0104507/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/indochine
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: French, Vietnamese
  • MPA Rating: PG-13
  • Genre: Drama, Romance, War
  • Runtime: 160 min
  • Writer: Erik Orsenna, Louis Gardel, Catherine Cohen
  • Director: Régis Wargnier
  • Cast: Catherine Deneuve, Vincent Perez, Linh-Dan Pham
  • Keywords: parent child relationship, extramarital affair, 1930s, love of one’s life, adoption,
7.0/10
72% – Critics
84% – Audience

Indochine Storyline

July, 1954. Éliane Devries is recounting a story of importance to a young Eurasian man, the story that primarily took place approximately twenty years ago. Then, she, a native francophone, owned and operated a rubber plantation in French Indochina – the place of her birth – she living primarily in the plantation’s house with her widowed father Émile Devries and her teenaged daughter Camille Devries. Éliane adopted Camille, of Asian descent, when Camille was five after her own parents, Éliane’s dearest friends, died. Éliane raised Camille with western as opposed to Asian traditions, the two who could not have loved each other more if they were blood-related. Regardless, Éliane and Madame Minh Tam entered into an agreement for Camille eventually to be married to Madame Tam’s son, Tanh Tam, the two who were fond of but perhaps not in love with each other in the true sense. One of Éliane’s associates was Guy Asselin, the head of security for the French ruling government in Indochina, he who wanted to marry her, but she, in turn, who was not in love with him. Because of their mutual attraction, Éliane ended up entering into an unlikely and somewhat clandestine relationship with Jean-Baptiste Le Guen, a young French naval officer based in Indochina. Shortly thereafter, Camille met Jean-Baptiste under dangerous circumstances and fell in love with him herself, largely due to that circumstance. In discovering Camille’s feelings for Jean-Baptiste, Éliane took action to prevent Camille from getting hurt from a broken heart. Camille, in turn, decided to search for her own true happiness, which consequentially led her on a path to the cultural and geopolitical changes of the time.

Indochine Play trailer

Indochine Photos

Indochine Torrents Download

720pbluray1.42 GBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:7C68FE31A7D34BDCA16607512EF55B3131948B3A
1080pbluray2.92 GBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:FEE39D69208DC30156CA112219B79C67DD055AC5

Indochine Subtitles Download

Danishsubtitle Indochine.1992.720p.BluRay.x264.AC3
Danishsubtitle Indochine.1992.1080p.BluRay.x264-nikt0
Danishsubtitle Indochine.1992.1080p.BluRay.x264-nikt0
Englishsubtitle Indone.1992.BluRay.720p.x264-MySiLU
Englishsubtitle Indone.1992.BluRay.720p.x264-Ganool
Englishsubtitle Indone.1992.BluRay.1080p.x264-MySiLU
Englishsubtitle Indochine.1992.1080p.BluRay.4K.Restoration.x264.AAC.TomX
Englishsubtitle Indochina.1992.BluRay.720p.x264.AC3-MySilu
Englishsubtitle Indone.1992.720p.BluRay.x264-CiNEFiLE
Farsi/Persiansubtitle Indone.1992.720p.BluRay.x264-CiNEFiLE
Indone.1992.BluRay.720p.x264-Ganool
Indone.1992.BluRay.720p.x264-MySiLU
Farsi/Persiansubtitle Indochine.1992.720p.Remastered.BluRay.x264.Pahe.ph
Indochine.1992.480p.Remastered.BluRay.x264.Pahe.ph
Indochine.1992.1080p.Remastered.BluRay.x264.Pahe.ph
Frenchsubtitle Indone.1992.BluRay.720p.x264-MySiLU
Frenchsubtitle Indone.1992.BluRay.720p.x264-Ganool
Frenchsubtitle Indone.1992.BluRay.1080p.x264-MySiLU
Frenchsubtitle Indone.1992.720p.BluRay.x264-CiNEFiLE
Frenchsubtitle Indone.1992.720p.BluRay.3xRus.Fre.HDCLUB
Frenchsubtitle Indochine.1992.REMASTERED.1080p.BluRay.x264-USURY
Indochine.1992.REMASTERED.720p.BluRay.x264-USURY
Indochine.1992.iNTERNAL.BDRip.x264-MANiC
Frenchsubtitle Indochine.1992.REMASTERED.1080p.BluRay.x264-USURY
Frenchsubtitle Indochine.1992.720p.BluRay.3xRus.Fre.HDCLUB.FR
Vietnamesesubtitle Indochine.1992.1080p.BluRay.10Bit.HEVC.EAC3-SARTRE
Vietnamesesubtitle Indochine-1992-720p-BluRay-x264-CiNEFiLE

Indochine Movie Reviews

don’t really share the love

Éliane Devries (Catherine Deneuve) adopts her Vietnamese best friends’ orphan daughter Camille. She becomes one of the biggest rubber plantation owner combining both properties. Her father keeps a young Vietnamese girlfriend. She has a secret affair with French officer Jean-Baptiste Le Guen. After a dangerous incident, Camille believes that Jean-Baptiste saved her and falls in love with him.

This won the Oscar for foreign film and Deneuve was nominated. It’s a sprawling melodramatic romantic epic. Despite the Oscar love, I don’t completely share the feeling. The epic setting is beautiful. It is grand in scale and personal in scope. I can’t really get into Eliane. The most compelling character is Camille although the actress is a newcomer struggling to rise to the occasion. The romance with Jean-Baptiste is the heaviest of melodrama. It’s all melodrama and not really to my taste.

Beautiful French Look at Their Own History

This story is set in 1930, at the time when French colonial rule in Indochina is ending. An unmarried French woman who works in the rubber fields, raises a Vietnamese princess as if she was her own daughter. She, and her daughter both fall in love with a young French navy officer, which will change both their lives significantly.

Maybe I’m wrong, but I feel like if you mention “Vietnam” to the average American, you would have them thinking about our country’s role in the Vietnam War. Specifically, how it affected our veterans. Rarely would you get anyone thinking about the country itself. And also, it may not be well-known (though it should be) that France had a far deeper history in the region than the United States ever did.

This film looks great, and may have some of that glamor that is not realistic, but it does attempt to show the interaction of the French and the Vietnamese (in what was called French Indochina). Anyone interested in Vietnam or colonialism ought to check it out.

two weeks ago, I’d never even heard of a coxswain

Throughout the past forty years, much has been written about the Vietnam War. Less has been told about the history of Vietnam before the US got involved. Regis Wargnier’s “Indochine” does a really good job.

Catherine Deneuve plays Eliane Devries, the owner of a rubber plantation in 1930s Vietnam. Eliane has raised a Vietnamese girl (Lin Dam Pham) as her own and named her Camille. But then, two things change the course of the mother-daughter relationship. One is that Camille falls for French soldier Jean-Baptiste (Vincent Perez). The other is Vietnam’s budding independence movement, with which Camille gets involved. Jean-Baptiste’s relationship with Camille makes him suspect in the eyes of the colonial government.

At the very least, this movie is a fine focus on the events that led up to the US’s tragic involvement in Indochina. But it’s also a good look at Vietnamese culture (I like it when movies show us a culture that we don’t usually get to see), not to mention the Vietnamese landscape. To be certain, I have always considered it important to understand as much as possible about regions such as Indochina, if only to understand why the US got involved there. Definitely a great one. I recommend it.

And yes, two weeks ago, I’d never heard of a coxswain (which they mention during the boat racing scene). I only first learned the word while watching the Beijing Olympics.