Jungle of Heirs
A German communist flees to Northern France with his son. German troops follow in May 1940. The son flees with the village towards Dieppe at the English Channel, as does the separated dad, joined by a…

Jungle of Heirs
A German communist flees to Northern France with his son. German troops follow in May 1940. The son flees with the village towards Dieppe at the English Channel, as does the separated dad, joined by a Scottish officer. In May 1940, German troops enter France. Frightened by the progress of the enemy, the people of a small village of Pas-de-Calais decide, on the recommendations of the prefecture, to give up everything to go on the road, fleeing to the coast. Among them, there is Paul, the village mayor. He led the group, seeks to maintain a minimum of order and republican spirit in this nomadic life. Mado, his wife, plays music trying to find the fragrance of those that took place in his coffee in the village. Suzanne, a young teacher, goes to meet to choose the least congested route. And she especially supports a small German boy, 8-year-old Max, whose father Hans was arrested after the declaration of war. During the Arras attack, residents are released from prison and abandoned in the deserted city. Hans managed to flee the city, accompanied by Scottish officer Percy, whose entire unit died under German bullets. These two will travel together, Hans seeking to recover his son who fled the village, Percy hoping to reach the sea and find a boat back to England. —Fadette Drouard A very realistic movie about the migration of farmers from a small village of Nothern Grand in 1940. The Germans are at the doorstep of Arras. These vulnerable people people suffer greatly.... A hard film to watch that make us realize the difficulties of their voyage. Very similar for so many people's plight in the past several years because of war, climate change, and the spreading of tropical diseases. —Simone B. Margolis

Jungle of Heirs
Drama
Film Details
A German communist flees to Northern France with his son. German troops follow in May 1940. The son flees with the village towards Dieppe at the English Channel, as does the separated dad, joined by a Scottish officer.
In May 1940, German troops enter France. Frightened by the progress of the enemy, the people of a small village of Pas-de-Calais decide, on the recommendations of the prefecture, to give up everything to go on the road, fleeing to the coast. Among them, there is Paul, the village mayor.
He led the group, seeks to maintain a minimum of order and republican spirit in this nomadic life. Mado, his wife, plays music trying to find the fragrance of those that took place in his coffee in the village. Suzanne, a young teacher, goes to meet to choose the least congested route.
And she especially supports a small German boy, 8-year-old Max, whose father Hans was arrested after the declaration of war. During the Arras attack, residents are released from prison and abandoned in the deserted city. Hans managed to flee the city, accompanied by Scottish officer Percy, whose entire unit died under German bullets.
These two will travel together, Hans seeking to recover his son who fled the village, Percy hoping to reach the sea and find a boat back to England. —Fadette Drouard A very realistic movie about the migration of farmers from a small village of Nothern Grand in 1940. The Germans are at the doorstep of Arras.
These vulnerable people people suffer greatly.... A hard film to watch that make us realize the difficulties of their voyage. Very similar for so many people's plight in the past several years because of war, climate change, and the spreading of tropical diseases.
—Simone B. Margolis.