Draw Me Saint-Exupery
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- Cataloging
- Transcript
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On the 31st of July 1944, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry disappeared over the Mediterranean Sea. With this mystery, a myth was born.
Who was the man whose book The Little Prince was translated into more than 250 languages and dialects? Draw Me Saint-Exupéry looks back at different moments of his intense life with an ironic look on the myth. Film archives and « drawn archives » help narrate the story told over the course of a flight.
Citation
Main credits
Jarach, Andrés (film director)
Jarach, Andrés (screenwriter)
Moreau, Alain (film director)
Moreau, Alain (screenwriter)
Guigon, Juliette (film producer)
Winocour, Patrick (film producer)
Other credits
Edited by Josiane Zardoya; original music, Etienne Charry.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
0: 10:00:45.00 10:00:48.05
He was very shy, he was candid,
1: 10:00:48.17 10:00:50.20
he had no style
when it came to clothes,
2: 10:00:50.24 10:00:52.17
his style came elsewhere.
3: 10:00:53.05 10:00:54.19
And he'd tell stories,
4: 10:00:55.04 10:00:58.20
he was very funny, he'd recite
Mallarmé with a Swiss accent,
5: 10:00:59.02 10:01:00.10
he'd perform card tricks,
6: 10:01:00.14 10:01:03.05
which was sometimes
his way of hiding himself
7: 10:01:03.11 10:01:05.21
from people
he didn't know very well.
8: 10:01:06.00 10:01:08.10
He'd sing songs. He sang in chorus.
9: 10:01:08.18 10:01:12.13
He didn't do anything like anyone
else, he's nothing like other people,
10: 10:01:12.17 10:01:17.10
he was a knight of the Holy Grail
who lived among us at that time.
11: 10:01:17.20 10:01:21.07
There was no one like him,
he couldn't do anything,
12: 10:01:21.11 10:01:27.06
he couldn't even dress, speak
and smoke like other people.
13: 10:01:27.12 10:01:31.21
He was a man
who was a bit distracted.
14: 10:01:32.00 10:01:34.04
I should say, he often had incidents.
15: 10:01:34.08 10:01:36.17
There'd be a fire on board,
or the oxygen would cut out
16: 10:01:36.21 10:01:40.11
or the engine would stop running,
there was anti-aircraft defence.
17: 10:01:40.24 10:01:42.09
He'd seen his fair share.
18: 10:01:45.11 10:01:47.15
Hello Madam, hello Madam Savais.
19: 10:01:48.00 10:01:49.14
Hello, sir.
20: 10:01:49.18 10:01:53.16
Is it true Mrs Savais that Saint
Exupéry built machines to fly in?
21: 10:01:54.01 10:01:55.11
Yes, that's correct.
22: 10:01:55.15 10:01:58.05
He'd go looking for sheets
in the laundry room,
23: 10:01:58.17 10:02:01.17
he'd tear them up into smaller pieces
24: 10:02:01.21 10:02:05.08
and stick them to bits of wood
or whatever he could find
25: 10:02:05.21 10:02:09.02
and he'd go to the ledge
opposite the château.
26: 10:02:09.10 10:02:12.19
Then he'd lift his arms
to try and jump,
27: 10:02:13.01 10:02:15.04
but he didn't always succeed!
28: 10:02:46.11 10:02:49.22
My first memory is Antoine
following me into the park
29: 10:02:50.01 10:02:51.19
with a little green chair.
30: 10:02:52.06 10:02:55.20
And every time I'd stop,
Antoine would sit on his little chair
31: 10:02:55.24 10:02:59.06
and wait until I walked. We'd do that
all the way round the park.
32: 10:03:01.08 10:03:03.13
He was overly lively,
33: 10:03:03.22 10:03:05.02
sensitive,
34: 10:03:05.10 10:03:06.21
quite unbearable,
35: 10:03:07.18 10:03:10.06
but extremely sensitive,
all the same.
36: 10:03:10.15 10:03:12.16
Oh, a charming young child.
37: 10:03:14.04 10:03:15.09
Charming.
38: 10:03:15.18 10:03:19.03
With curly blond hair,
which sat like a halo...
39: 10:03:20.01 10:03:23.04
...around his head.
We'd call him the Sun King.
40: 10:03:23.21 10:03:27.11
But he was very good, he had a very
kind heart. He was very decent too.
41: 10:03:28.00 10:03:31.14
He was incapable of any wickedness.
But he did what he wanted.
42: 10:03:31.18 10:03:36.12
My teachers actually noted
that Saint-Ex
43: 10:03:37.06 10:03:39.21
was neither a particularly
well-behaved child,
44: 10:03:40.00 10:03:43.19
nor a troublemaker, nor a dunce,
45: 10:03:44.08 10:03:45.19
nor a brilliant student.
46: 10:04:19.06 10:04:21.01
They also invented
47: 10:04:21.20 10:04:26.10
a bike with a sail.
48: 10:04:26.19 10:04:32.01
He asked the governess,
Miss Marguerite, who we called 'Moisi'
49: 10:04:32.10 10:04:36.18
and hoisted this old sheet
up a broom handle
50: 10:04:37.08 10:04:40.10
attached the broomstick to the bike
51: 10:04:40.18 10:04:43.00
and wheeled himself
to the top of a slope
52: 10:04:43.04 10:04:45.18
and my siblings and I watched him.
53: 10:04:47.14 10:04:51.05
And off Antoine went.
54: 10:04:51.15 10:04:55.09
It seemed as though
the bike took off into the air.
55: 10:04:55.13 10:04:59.05
That was his first flying experiment.
56: 10:05:21.06 10:05:24.23
He came back into the dining room,
we'd been round the table for ages
57: 10:05:25.06 10:05:29.09
and suddenly he burst out shouting:
"I've just flown!"
58: 10:05:29.13 10:05:31.15
So everyone was stunned,
59: 10:05:32.05 10:05:35.09
and our grandmother was
at the head of the table
60: 10:05:35.13 10:05:39.09
and she was very strict and you always
had to be punctual at mealtimes,
61: 10:05:39.13 10:05:41.04
so she was already very cross.
62: 10:05:41.08 10:05:46.05
And she started shouting "this child
will kill us and he'll kill himself."
63: 10:05:46.21 10:05:50.16
Did he have permission
to get in a plane?
64: 10:05:50.20 10:05:54.11
I don't believe so. He had permission
to wander the grounds
65: 10:05:54.18 10:05:58.21
but our mother had definitely never
given him permission to fly.
66: 10:07:23.12 10:07:25.20
On October 1926,
67: 10:07:26.03 10:07:29.16
Saint-Exupéry visited
my office in Montaudran
68: 10:07:30.01 10:07:34.02
where, as you know, the Latécoère
airlines were operated from.
69: 10:07:35.03 10:07:40.02
And he stood before me
like the good student that he was.
70: 10:07:40.20 10:07:44.10
But I must say that his flying record
71: 10:07:44.20 10:07:47.10
and references
weren't the best I'd seen.
72: 10:07:47.16 10:07:49.12
I mean, pilot references.
73: 10:08:26.03 10:08:30.01
We were starting to use
the Casablanca-Dakar route,
74: 10:08:30.22 10:08:34.16
which we had
lots of problems sorting out.
75: 10:08:34.20 10:08:39.09
Principally technical issues,
followed by political issues
76: 10:08:39.17 10:08:42.03
because flying over Rio del Oro
77: 10:08:42.14 10:08:45.21
and having many power failures
78: 10:08:46.01 10:08:49.19
meant coming into contact
with the desert nomads
79: 10:08:49.23 10:08:55.22
who as you know, at the time,
were cruel and plunderers.
80: 10:09:04.06 10:09:07.22
This is why,
in order to provide a human solution
81: 10:09:08.11 10:09:10.20
to our problem with the Moors people,
82: 10:09:11.02 10:09:14.23
I decided to send
Saint-Exupéry to Cape Juby.
83: 10:10:05.23 10:10:09.07
- What kind of man was Saint-Exupéry?
- Ah, he was a very brave man,
84: 10:10:09.11 10:10:14.05
in a good way, he was a man
who knew things like...
85: 10:10:14.14 10:10:17.00
...like a marabout.
86: 10:10:17.04 10:10:19.08
But he had a lot of courage.
87: 10:10:41.07 10:10:43.04
How long did you stay with The Moors?
88: 10:10:43.08 10:10:46.03
Oh, we were with the Moors
for eight months.
89: 10:10:47.00 10:10:49.19
Sharpening the grindstone
and scoffing couscous.
90: 10:10:49.23 10:10:53.18
That's all he had us doing.
The worst were the women.
91: 10:10:55.02 10:10:59.01
- Was it Saint-Ex who came to get you?
- Saint-Ex and a Moorish interpreter.
92: 10:10:59.17 10:11:02.12
He came to get us over there,
he was the ambassador!
93: 10:11:04.06 10:11:08.24
I knew him from 1925-27
until 1928 in Cape Juby,
94: 10:11:09.13 10:11:12.11
And he really wrote a lot.
95: 10:11:12.21 10:11:16.10
He was forgetful, and the post
would be sent off last minute.
96: 10:11:16.14 10:11:20.04
He'd spend the whole night
typing very hurriedly.
97: 10:11:20.10 10:11:24.23
He did all that to send it
to Mr Daurat in Toulouse.
98: 10:11:25.09 10:11:28.15
Otherwise, he'd spend
his time with the Moors,
99: 10:11:29.13 10:11:32.09
and he'd drink tea
with them left, right and centre.
100: 10:11:32.13 10:11:33.13
Or...
101: 10:11:34.04 10:11:36.10
sometimes he'd take
his massive raincoat,
102: 10:11:36.14 10:11:40.16
with a pad of paper,
and he'd walk off into the dunes.
103: 10:11:41.08 10:11:45.17
He'd come back at 3 or 4 o'clock
and we'd have already eaten.
104: 10:11:46.04 10:11:48.17
"What's there to eat,"
he'd say. "It's too late!".
105: 10:11:48.21 10:11:54.18
At that time, what he wanted was
boiled rice and bread and dripping.
106: 10:11:54.22 10:11:56.16
He ate that, that's what he liked!
107: 10:14:56.22 10:15:00.06
#I can still picture the first night#
#flight in Argentina in my head.#
108: 10:15:01.15 10:15:04.22
#It was a dark night, where the only#
#sparkles, like stars, were the rare,#
109: 10:15:05.01 10:15:07.04
#dispersed lights across the plains.#
110: 10:15:09.02 10:15:10.21
#We have to try to reach them#
111: 10:15:11.08 10:15:14.12
#and communicate using#
#some of these lights,#
112: 10:15:14.16 10:15:17.01
#which burn here and there#
#in the countryside.#
113: 10:15:28.07 10:15:30.08
I met him in Buenos Aires.
114: 10:15:30.16 10:15:34.20
He wrote me a huge letter
about a flight he'd taken at night.
115: 10:15:35.05 10:15:38.20
And he said:
116: 10:15:40.12 10:15:43.12
"Dear lady, if you'll oblige,
I'd like to be your fiancé"
117: 10:15:43.16 10:15:46.06
and there were 80 pages
about a flight at night.
118: 10:15:46.17 10:15:47.21
So I said to him:
119: 10:15:48.00 10:15:53.00
"Sir, your letter is like a book.
120: 10:15:53.04 10:15:55.21
It's a night flight.
Why don't you write one?"
121: 10:15:56.04 10:15:58.05
So he said:
"If you push me, I'll write it.
122: 10:15:58.10 10:15:59.22
But I'm a bad author,
123: 10:16:00.01 10:16:03.06
I've already written
a small book called Southern Mail
124: 10:16:03.10 10:16:06.14
and I've only sold three of them.
To my parents."
125: 10:16:39.23 10:16:43.20
I think he had
great respect for literature,
126: 10:16:44.05 10:16:46.20
like all people
who aren't of that profession.
127: 10:16:47.01 10:16:49.13
But the big difference
128: 10:16:49.17 10:16:53.08
was that he started having
something to say when he wrote.
129: 10:16:53.15 10:16:58.16
Whereas many writers,
I'd even say almost all writers,
130: 10:16:58.20 10:17:01.02
write about what other people do,
131: 10:17:01.10 10:17:03.19
or what they imagine they could do,
132: 10:17:04.03 10:17:06.17
or what the characters they invent do.
133: 10:17:06.22 10:17:10.06
But he was doing something
before he started writing.
134: 10:17:10.10 10:17:16.02
If you like, in relative terms,
he was in a situation like Caesar's
135: 10:17:16.06 10:17:19.24
who became a writer and wrote
commentaries on the Gallic Wars
136: 10:17:20.03 10:17:22.24
after having commanded
the Roman armies.
137: 10:17:50.10 10:17:54.14
We believe that Saint-Exupéry was
always an exceptional man,
138: 10:17:54.18 10:17:57.23
but we also believe
that he was always happy, celebrated,
139: 10:17:58.02 10:18:00.10
you know, surrounded and supported.
140: 10:18:00.14 10:18:04.11
That he's someone
who entered into legend.
141: 10:18:04.15 10:18:07.14
But it's a complete falsehood!
That's why we love him.
142: 10:18:07.18 10:18:10.19
We love him because he was unhappy,
because he was like us,
143: 10:18:10.23 10:18:15.14
because he suffered from hostility
and a lack of understanding.
144: 10:18:15.18 10:18:17.19
Listen to this letter to Guillaumet:
145: 10:18:17.23 10:18:21.13
"It seems you've arrived.
My heart is thumping a little.
146: 10:18:21.17 10:18:25.20
If only you knew of the horrid
life I've been leading since you left
147: 10:18:25.24 10:18:29.08
and the immense disgust for life
that I've started feeling.
148: 10:18:29.19 10:18:32.00
Just because I wrote this silly book,
149: 10:18:32.13 10:18:35.15
I've been condemned to misery
and hostility from my peers.
150: 10:18:35.19 10:18:38.21
Mermoz will tell you what reputation
people who I hadn't seen
151: 10:18:39.00 10:18:43.07
and that I loved, have given me.
They'll tell you how pretentious I am
152: 10:18:43.21 10:18:46.00
Just ask any Toulouse to Dakar pilots.
153: 10:18:46.04 10:18:48.24
Until Etienne,
who I hadn't seen since America
154: 10:18:49.09 10:18:52.03
and who,
despite not having seen me again,
155: 10:18:52.07 10:18:54.00
has said that I'm a poser."
156: 10:21:23.21 10:21:27.16
Some people say to me: "but you do
realise you've married a famous name."
157: 10:21:27.20 10:21:32.15
I married an aviator
and he became a huge author.
158: 10:21:33.20 10:21:34.24
WIND, SAND AND STARS
159: 10:21:36.06 10:21:40.09
#Henri Guillaumet, my comrade,#
#I dedicate this book to you.#
160: 10:21:58.03 10:22:00.14
#I let go of the commands#
#that were clamping me#
161: 10:22:00.18 10:22:02.17
#to stop me being thrown#
#out of the plane.#
162: 10:22:02.21 10:22:04.09
#The shaking was so violent#
163: 10:22:04.13 10:22:07.10
#that my seat straps#
#were hurting my shoulders.#
164: 10:22:07.14 10:22:12.18
#After two hours, I landed upside down.#
#I got free but the storm blew me down.#
165: 10:22:12.23 10:22:15.13
#I got back up on my feet#
#and it blew me down again.#
166: 10:22:15.17 10:22:19.07
#I had to slide under the wreckage#
#and dig a shelter in the snow.#
167: 10:22:19.11 10:22:23.02
#I wrapped myself in postal sacks#
#and for 48 hours, I waited.#
168: 10:23:46.24 10:23:50.01
He wasn't a bad pilot,
but he wasn't a great pilot.
169: 10:23:50.16 10:23:54.23
Saint-Exupéry was a genius,
170: 10:23:55.19 10:24:00.10
you could explain everything to him,
he'd repeat it all, note it all down,
171: 10:24:00.14 10:24:02.21
like an attentive school child,
172: 10:24:03.00 10:24:04.21
and he did everything very well.
173: 10:24:05.00 10:24:08.00
But when he was flying,
he forgot everything: he was great.
174: 10:24:08.04 10:24:10.19
He'd forget, he'd think
about all kinds of things,
175: 10:24:12.11 10:24:13.22
even the cosmos.
176: 10:24:14.01 10:24:18.11
He'd forget everything
and then he'd slow down,
177: 10:24:18.15 10:24:23.01
adjust the flaps, fix the propellers,
check the engine temperatures,
178: 10:24:23.05 10:24:25.06
he knew how to,
but sometimes he forgot.
179: 10:25:09.12 10:25:12.21
#That day, we travelled 60 to 70km,#
180: 10:25:13.00 10:25:15.05
#including our way back to the plane.#
181: 10:25:15.09 10:25:18.14
#So I then changed tactics#
#and left Provost with the plane.#
182: 10:25:18.18 10:25:20.19
#His job was to prepare and light fires#
183: 10:25:20.23 10:25:23.23
#to mark out the wreckage#
#in case of aerial search parties.#
184: 10:25:24.02 10:25:27.03
#So I left alone and without water#
#to carry on exploring.#
185: 10:25:27.17 10:25:31.10
#That day, I walked#
#for 8 to 9 hours at a quick pace.#
186: 10:25:32.17 10:25:35.17
#I remembered Guillaumet#
#who'd kept himself safe in the Andes#
187: 10:25:35.21 10:25:37.24
#and it was his example#
#that I followed.#
188: 10:25:47.01 10:25:50.03
We listened for news
from the press and radio, etc.
189: 10:25:51.14 10:25:55.00
We listened for news
but we were very worried.
190: 10:25:55.11 10:25:58.12
Because we'd had no news from him...
191: 10:25:59.19 10:26:03.06
and his friends were very worried.
192: 10:26:03.19 10:26:09.06
And would come to us for news thinking
that we'd have more recent updates.
193: 10:26:10.16 10:26:15.15
All the newspapers had
five or six columns with the headline:
194: 10:26:16.17 10:26:19.17
"Saint-Ex Missing."
"What happened to Saint-Ex," etc.
195: 10:26:19.21 10:26:23.00
As the hours went by,
we were losing hope
196: 10:26:23.04 10:26:26.12
and really started
to get almost hopeless.
197: 10:26:27.01 10:26:29.13
We'd just gone to bed...
198: 10:26:30.18 10:26:34.07
at around 1am when the phone rang.
199: 10:26:34.11 10:26:37.04
I thought to myself:
That's it, they've found him!
200: 10:26:38.06 10:26:40.08
Eclair-Journal
LONGTREK INTERRUPTED
201: 10:26:40.12 10:26:42.10
Saint-Ex and Provost, alive and well.
202: 10:26:42.21 10:26:46.16
#The aviators Saint-Exupéry and Provost#
#were found alive and well.#
203: 10:26:46.21 10:26:50.00
#They'd miraculously escaped death#
#and had made it to Cairo.#
204: 10:26:50.04 10:26:53.09
#Saint-Ex was resting in the gardens#
#of the Continental hotel#
205: 10:26:53.13 10:26:56.01
#in the company#
#of His Excellency, Mr Levitas.#
206: 10:28:18.19 10:28:24.11
After his accident in Guatemala, he
promised me he wouldn't fly any more.
207: 10:28:25.07 10:28:29.16
And even after he'd recovered
from what was a horrible accident
208: 10:28:29.20 10:28:31.05
he still continued flying.
209: 10:28:59.19 10:29:02.01
I was in Spain for the Canard Enchaîné Newspaper
210: 10:29:02.19 10:29:04.05
and Saint-Exupéry...
211: 10:29:05.17 10:29:09.03
...was writing a report
for the Intransigeant and Paris Soir.
212: 10:29:09.07 10:29:11.14
THEY GUN MEN DOWN HERE
LIKE WE CHOP DOWN TREES
213: 10:29:18.19 10:29:21.21
A civil war is not so much a war,
but a disease.
214: 10:29:36.07 10:29:39.22
INTERNATIONAL REPORT by our special
correspondent Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
215: 10:29:40.01 10:29:41.21
War on the Carabanchel front
216: 10:29:42.00 10:29:44.01
"Sergeant, why are you
willing to die?"
217: 10:29:44.10 10:29:47.21
Let's not forget what
he wrote at that point.
218: 10:29:48.00 10:29:50.18
This is what he wrote
in France Soir at one point:
219: 10:29:50.22 10:29:54.02
"I really don't care..."
You see, forgive me.
220: 10:29:54.08 10:29:58.06
"...about the rules of the game of war
or the law of retaliation.
221: 10:29:58.10 10:29:59.16
Who started it?
222: 10:30:00.00 10:30:01.24
There's always an answer to an answer
223: 10:30:02.03 10:30:04.23
and the first death remains
hidden in the mists of time.
224: 10:30:05.02 10:30:07.07
I distrust this logic
now more than ever.
225: 10:30:07.11 10:30:10.08
I saw a small girl stripped
of her sparkly dress.
226: 10:30:10.12 10:30:13.04
How can I believe
in the virtue of retaliation?
227: 10:30:13.13 10:30:17.07
As for the benefits of such
a bombardment, I can't understand it.
228: 10:30:17.11 10:30:20.03
I've seen disembowelled housekeepers,
disfigured children,
229: 10:30:20.07 10:30:24.16
I saw this old market trader walking
along wiping away the debris..."
230: 10:30:24.20 10:30:27.18
Well, I'll skip that.
"I saw a doorman," etc.
231: 10:30:27.22 10:30:31.08
"Moral lesson? But a bombardment
turns back on its own aim.
232: 10:30:31.18 10:30:34.18
With each canon shot fired, something
grows back stronger in Madrid."
233: 10:30:35.03 10:30:38.08
Saint-Ex was not a man who sided
with the Left or the Right.
234: 10:30:38.12 10:30:39.14
He was a moralist!
235: 10:30:40.00 10:30:43.13
But a special kind of moralist.
236: 10:30:44.07 10:30:45.18
He wasn't a moralist...
237: 10:30:46.01 10:30:49.11
...who gave others lessons
that he himself did not follow.
238: 10:30:50.13 10:30:55.03
#In the Kremlin square, several groups#
#are participating in a procession.#
239: 10:31:23.20 10:31:27.01
#It was the ANT-20.#
#Nicknamed Maxime Gorki.#
240: 10:31:27.05 10:31:30.21
#A 58-tonne 8-engine machine#
#built by engineer Topolev.#
241: 10:31:32.00 10:31:33.17
#Designed for luxury flights,#
242: 10:31:34.07 10:31:36.10
#it is operated by a 11-person crew.#
243: 10:31:36.19 10:31:39.23
#One of its last passengers#
#would fly in it on 18th May 1935:#
244: 10:31:40.02 10:31:41.13
#Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.#
245: 10:31:41.17 10:31:44.21
#The next day, the huge machine,#
#hit mid-air by a fighter jet,#
246: 10:31:45.00 10:31:46.06
#crashed to the ground.#
247: 10:33:10.17 10:33:14.19
#The aviation meeting was presided over#
#by Mr Pierre Cot, Air Minister.#
248: 10:33:14.23 10:33:18.12
#Marise Bastier and Saint-Exupéry#
#attended this display.#
249: 10:33:25.09 10:33:27.06
We sometimes walked around London.
250: 10:33:27.12 10:33:30.08
In honesty, we'd grow
rather bored in the evenings.
251: 10:33:30.12 10:33:32.21
One day we were walking
around Piccadilly,
252: 10:33:33.00 10:33:36.16
it was midnight
or 1 or 2 in the morning.
253: 10:33:36.20 10:33:39.10
We didn't know where to go,
254: 10:33:40.09 10:33:42.22
and I said to Saint Ex:
"How about we go to a club?"
255: 10:33:43.01 10:33:44.05
We went into a club,
256: 10:33:44.09 10:33:48.00
a very exclusive club because if you
paid a pound you got straight in.
257: 10:33:48.04 10:33:49.17
We went in: Montauban!
258: 10:33:50.10 10:33:52.13
A Montauban room.
259: 10:33:53.09 10:33:56.20
Seats, a bench,
260: 10:33:56.24 10:33:59.21
and working the floor
were 4 miserable waitresses
261: 10:34:00.00 10:34:03.15
and a few no-hopers dancing
to the sound of a sorry-looking band.
262: 10:34:03.19 10:34:06.01
We sadly sat drinking our whiskies
263: 10:34:06.20 10:34:09.02
when suddenly a waitress saw Saint-Ex.
264: 10:34:09.13 10:34:10.17
"Antonio!"
265: 10:34:11.06 10:34:12.21
They recognised each other.
266: 10:34:13.00 10:34:15.20
She was a waitress
who'd known him back
267: 10:34:16.02 10:34:18.14
when Aéropostale
was first established.
268: 10:34:19.02 10:34:21.07
In Buenos Aires or Mexico,
I'm not sure.
269: 10:34:21.15 10:34:24.16
And there they were talking,
recalling memories,
270: 10:34:24.20 10:34:29.04
and the girls said "what about him?"
and Saint-Exupéry'd say "He's dead."
271: 10:34:29.08 10:34:32.20
"And what about...?"
"He had an accident and lost an arm."
272: 10:34:32.24 10:34:35.16
"And what about...?"
It was a list of ghosts.
273: 10:34:35.20 10:34:37.07
But there were a few survivors!
274: 10:34:37.11 10:34:41.07
He loved life but he'd spent
so long up in the clouds,
275: 10:34:41.11 10:34:45.04
when he came back down to Earth,
he loved eating and laughing.
276: 10:34:45.08 10:34:48.15
He kept a set of cards in his pocket.
277: 10:34:49.02 10:34:50.22
And when you'd go to talk to him,
278: 10:34:51.01 10:34:53.17
straight away he'd say:
"why are you a thief?
279: 10:34:54.00 10:34:56.20
You've taken my ace of diamonds,
it's in your bag."
280: 10:34:56.24 10:34:58.14
And you'd find it in your bag.
281: 10:34:58.23 10:35:02.09
To the extent that,
he didn't like talking about himself.
282: 10:35:03.00 10:35:06.03
But he'd play 40 tricks on you,
each better than the last,
283: 10:35:06.07 10:35:07.22
until you were hypnotised!
284: 10:35:08.15 10:35:12.03
Renoir would you like to give us
a description of Saint-Exupéry?
285: 10:35:12.14 10:35:13.14
Well...
286: 10:35:13.20 10:35:15.03
#He was a child,#
287: 10:35:15.07 10:35:20.03
#with a child's face,#
#a child's eyes, a child's behaviour,#
288: 10:35:20.12 10:35:25.06
#an undeniable love#
#for flowers, trees and women.#
289: 10:35:25.22 10:35:27.19
#And then a few other stranger loves.#
290: 10:35:28.01 10:35:31.13
#For example, his love#
#for frozen olive oil.#
291: 10:35:32.00 10:35:36.17
#We tried perfecting#
#our method of freezing olive oil.#
292: 10:35:36.21 10:35:39.22
#We got some lovely results.#
293: 10:35:43.04 10:35:47.05
#I'm going to dazzle you a little, I'm#
#going to show you my beautiful voice.#
294: 10:35:47.10 10:35:49.03
#And this is for your enjoyment.#
295: 10:35:50.15 10:35:55.14
#"This man here, who was my father,#
#never knew my name."#
296: 10:35:55.18 10:35:58.03
#Oh I'm messing it up,#
#I'm shouting too much.#
297: 10:35:58.07 10:35:59.12
#No, I'll try another.#
298: 10:36:00.08 10:36:06.05
#"One day I'll find#
#my sweetheart, oh my buoys.#
299: 10:36:06.17 10:36:10.15
#Oh la, oh la la, la."#
300: 10:36:47.11 10:36:50.16
When we learned of this move,
the whole unit was a bit worried
301: 10:36:50.20 10:36:53.00
because we wondered
what Saint-Exupéry,
302: 10:36:53.04 10:36:54.22
who we knew as a poet,
303: 10:36:56.04 10:36:57.24
was doing in a combat unit.
304: 10:36:59.08 10:37:02.14
When he arrived
on the 2nd of December, we offered him...
305: 10:37:03.15 10:37:07.01
...other accommodation,
but he preferred this one, in a farm,
306: 10:37:07.05 10:37:10.02
where he was calm
and could work in peace.
307: 10:37:10.06 10:37:13.24
He worked late into the night. So he
was really in his comfort zone here.
308: 10:37:14.03 10:37:17.02
When he got here,
we were already partially at-ease
309: 10:37:17.06 10:37:19.22
because we had
much fewer missions to carry out.
310: 10:37:20.02 10:37:24.09
We'd often see him,
early in the morning, at breakfast,
311: 10:37:25.02 10:37:27.18
he'd have spent the night
scribbling on paper.
312: 10:37:28.12 10:37:30.19
He showed us his invention projects.
313: 10:37:31.10 10:37:33.18
Can you tell us
why he was inventing things?
314: 10:37:34.01 10:37:38.06
He was always inventing things to try
and resolve problems faced by pilots.
315: 10:37:38.13 10:37:41.19
In all of his inventions,
there was an issue to resolve.
316: 10:37:41.23 10:37:45.17
When I say inventions, I don't mean
Jules Vernes-type abstract ideas.
317: 10:37:45.21 10:37:49.01
When people say Vernes invented
the submarine, they weren't far off.
318: 10:37:49.05 10:37:52.13
He invented, he created,
but in great detail, by which I mean,
319: 10:37:52.17 10:37:55.11
he thought about the mechanisms
and the device itself.
320: 10:37:55.15 10:37:58.20
For example, he invented
an electric actimeter
321: 10:37:58.24 10:38:00.15
that measures the distance
322: 10:38:00.20 10:38:03.17
between a plane and the ground
to make it easier to land.
323: 10:38:05.08 10:38:07.03
He invented...
324: 10:38:07.20 10:38:11.06
...other devices
that facilitated navigation.
325: 10:38:11.13 10:38:15.03
He made devices that improved
mechanical techniques.
326: 10:38:15.17 10:38:18.01
He also made inventions...
327: 10:38:18.14 10:38:21.23
...that considerably improved
navigation techniques.
328: 10:38:22.05 10:38:24.01
Always aviation-related issues.
329: 10:38:38.14 10:38:41.06
WAR PILOT
330: 10:38:54.22 10:38:57.13
It was a mission at 1,500m altitude,
331: 10:38:57.22 10:39:01.21
I was looking down,
watching what was happening below.
332: 10:39:02.24 10:39:05.10
And Saint-Exupéry
was more free-spirited
333: 10:39:05.14 10:39:07.22
and was steering
the plane along a course.
334: 10:39:08.01 10:39:10.22
From time to time, he'd ask me:
"Is that still right?
335: 10:39:11.01 10:39:12.04
Shall we keep going?"
336: 10:39:12.09 10:39:15.04
And I'd say: "Keep going.
If it works, keep going."
337: 10:39:15.23 10:39:19.18
There was even a moment where
the plane became destabilised.
338: 10:39:20.02 10:39:23.21
A huge bit of shrapnel
must have hit the side of the plane.
339: 10:39:24.00 10:39:27.01
The plane almost flipped,
I thought we were going down.
340: 10:39:27.05 10:39:28.23
But it re-stabilised itself
341: 10:39:29.02 10:39:32.08
and we walked away
without too much damage being done.
342: 10:41:18.00 10:41:19.14
#It was an American ship,#
343: 10:41:19.18 10:41:23.24
#which was designed#
#for tourists who weren't in a hurry,#
344: 10:41:24.03 10:41:25.06
#like a cruise ship.#
345: 10:41:25.13 10:41:28.20
#But it was fit#
#to bursting with migrants,#
346: 10:41:28.24 10:41:32.10
#they were all over the deck,#
#below the masts, in the hold.#
347: 10:41:32.17 10:41:35.18
#It really was#
#the image of immigration.#
348: 10:41:35.24 10:41:40.17
#There were lots of Israelites#
#fleeing Europe#
349: 10:41:41.08 10:41:43.02
#who would meet on the deck#
350: 10:41:43.07 10:41:46.17
#and play the accordion#
#while singing laments in German.#
351: 10:42:06.20 10:42:08.04
#New York was waiting for it.#
352: 10:42:08.08 10:42:11.24
#The fronts of books shops#
#were displaying all his books#
353: 10:42:12.03 10:42:13.18
#and all his previous titles.#
354: 10:42:13.22 10:42:16.17
#There were# Welcome# signs everywhere.#
355: 10:42:16.23 10:42:19.24
And there were French flags
in the windows in his honour.
356: 10:45:31.20 10:45:35.09
The story is he is
the Little Prince himself.
357: 10:45:35.13 10:45:36.18
It's his anima.
358: 10:45:37.04 10:45:40.06
And the Little Prince is
his soul asking him:
359: 10:45:40.10 10:45:42.03
Why did you abandon your rose?
360: 10:45:42.07 10:45:44.14
Your only rose.
Well, your only flower.
361: 10:45:44.18 10:45:49.15
It had petals like no other flower,
and it was the most humble.
362: 10:45:49.24 10:45:52.14
"But it's so beautiful,"
said the Little Prince.
363: 10:45:52.18 10:45:54.15
It perfumes and embalms.
364: 10:45:54.19 10:45:57.09
"But you shouldn't listen
to flowers," he said.
365: 10:45:57.13 10:46:00.05
"You should
just smell them and love them."
366: 10:46:00.17 10:46:05.01
But the Little Prince left
anyway when the wild birds left.
367: 10:46:05.11 10:46:07.07
That means he'd continue to fly.
368: 10:46:45.10 10:46:48.14
When Saint-Exupéry was ready
to resume war missions,
369: 10:46:48.18 10:46:51.22
he was really happy,
like a school child in the holidays.
370: 10:46:52.14 10:46:56.05
That's exactly the way
I'd describe his sense of joy.
371: 10:46:56.12 10:46:58.18
I must admit,
he had a lot of difficulty
372: 10:46:58.22 10:47:02.07
getting admitted as a pilot in 1943.
373: 10:47:02.15 10:47:07.02
In fact,
despite his former war exploits,
374: 10:47:07.08 10:47:10.13
and despite his worldwide fame
as an aviator and author,
375: 10:47:11.01 10:47:13.03
he was over 40 years old.
376: 10:47:13.18 10:47:18.02
At the time, the Americans thought
25 was quite old to be a pilot.
377: 10:47:18.16 10:47:21.18
Saint-Exupéry left
for his first mission in France,
378: 10:47:21.22 10:47:24.01
and I must say he was very happy.
379: 10:47:25.17 10:47:27.14
Unfortunately, during a landing,
380: 10:47:28.01 10:47:31.13
Saint-Exupéry made a very slight error
381: 10:47:31.23 10:47:37.06
and his air plane overshot the landing
and hit an olive tree
382: 10:47:37.15 10:47:40.11
at the end
of the Gammarth airstrip near Tunis.
383: 10:47:41.00 10:47:44.06
The Americans jumped
on this opportunity, this incident,
384: 10:47:44.22 10:47:48.22
to withdraw his permission to fly.
385: 10:47:50.14 10:47:54.02
Saint-Exupéry was
very taken aback by this ban.
386: 10:48:13.07 10:48:17.00
And it was
in our pilot villa in Bastia
387: 10:48:17.09 10:48:19.02
that I went to find him one night
388: 10:48:20.08 10:48:22.00
to tell him what I thought...
389: 10:48:26.08 10:48:27.16
...of his pilot career.
390: 10:48:27.21 10:48:31.10
I explained to him
that maybe he was a bit old.
391: 10:48:31.22 10:48:37.07
Flying planes like his at high
altitude wasn't the best role for him.
392: 10:48:38.08 10:48:40.19
We'd soon be landing in France
393: 10:48:41.04 10:48:42.19
and he needed to save himself
394: 10:48:42.23 10:48:48.15
because he had more important missions
to carry out once back in France.
395: 10:48:51.09 10:48:55.03
Saint-Ex was very touched
and I think he was...
396: 10:48:56.01 10:48:58.23
expecting me to say
something of the sort.
397: 10:48:59.23 10:49:02.04
He immediately replied, very moved,
398: 10:49:03.18 10:49:07.05
that he was sure
he'd die one way or another
399: 10:49:07.09 10:49:10.04
and that he couldn't bear for it to be
any other way than in a war mission.
400: 10:49:10.08 10:49:14.10
He'd received flying bans before
but he couldn't survive another.
401: 10:49:15.12 10:49:17.17
And he had a big favour to ask me:
402: 10:49:18.06 10:49:20.14
to accept to take charge
of his written work,
403: 10:49:20.18 10:49:24.09
which he gave me
very precise instructions for.
404: 10:49:24.23 10:49:27.16
The person I should hand his work to.
405: 10:49:28.01 10:49:31.05
And all the instructions
regarding the publication
406: 10:49:31.09 10:49:33.05
of what he called his life's work.
407: 10:49:33.09 10:49:35.23
In other words, his book
The Wisdom of the Sands.
408: 10:49:59.12 10:50:03.04
When I got back late that night
with my friend Pierre Stiegler,
409: 10:50:04.05 10:50:07.18
I noticed, with surprise,
that Saint-Exupéry wasn't in his room.
410: 10:50:07.22 10:50:11.06
I was deeply confused
411: 10:50:11.13 10:50:15.04
because I didn't know if he'd finished
getting ready for his mission.
412: 10:50:15.20 10:50:19.02
And I didn't know
if he'd be coming home to sleep.
413: 10:50:19.12 10:50:21.24
We didn't know what time he came home.
414: 10:50:22.03 10:50:26.03
We don't know who he spent
the night with, we'll never know.
415: 10:50:26.07 10:50:29.01
Unfortunately, on the 31st of July,
416: 10:50:29.07 10:50:32.17
Saint-Exupéry took off again
for a war mission.
417: 10:50:33.17 10:50:36.16
It was the first time,
for me it's a deep regret,
418: 10:50:36.20 10:50:39.09
that I didn't help him gear up.
419: 10:50:39.21 10:50:42.10
The first time that I didn't
help him into his cabin.
420: 10:50:42.14 10:50:45.08
It was the first time
I didn't start up the engine,
421: 10:50:45.12 10:50:47.13
that I didn't check over his cockpit.
422: 10:50:47.17 10:50:51.00
It was the first time I didn't
instruct him to open the flaps,
423: 10:50:51.04 10:50:53.06
and I wasn't with him
before a war mission.
424: 10:51:28.23 10:51:29.23
I have here...
425: 10:51:30.18 10:51:32.13
...the four last lines
426: 10:51:32.23 10:51:34.08
...of the last letter...
427: 10:51:34.22 10:51:38.08
...Saint-Exupéry wrote
to his friend Pierre Dalloz.
428: 10:51:38.21 10:51:42.10
Dear, dear Dalloz,
how I rue these four lines.
429: 10:51:43.13 10:51:47.04
would have loved to know what you
think about these present times,
430: 10:51:47.13 10:51:48.20
I personally despair.
431: 10:51:49.24 10:51:53.22
I've experienced power failures
and fainting through lack of oxygen,
432: 10:51:54.01 10:51:57.22
being chased by fighter pilots
and in-flight fires.
433: 10:51:58.18 10:52:00.02
I've seen my fair share.
434: 10:52:00.13 10:52:04.05
If I get brought down,
I will regret absolutely nothing.
435: 10:52:04.24 10:52:07.10
The termite mound
of the future horrifies me
436: 10:52:08.00 10:52:10.09
and I hate their robot-like virtues.
437: 10:52:10.19 10:52:12.13
I was born to be a gardener.
438: 10:52:12.23 10:52:14.10
Take care, Saint Ex.
439: 10:52:53.04 10:52:57.24
I SHALL LOOK AS IF I WERE DEAD
AND THAT WILL NOT BE TRUE