
Shedding new light on the Poilus
In No Bird’s Land, the spectator is immediately propelled into the hell of the trenches. The film opens with a scene of bombardments and chaos, immediately plunging the viewer into an oppressive atmosphere. Thanks to meticulous work on the image – alternating between blurring, marked contrasts and frenetic movements – an impression of a dream, or more frankly a nightmare, emerges from the very first seconds. Finally, the three main characters appear: Edgard, an injured private first class, Jean, a soldier from the 3rd infantry regiment who will try as best he can to find a doctor in the middle of this carnage, and a last soldier, anonymous, in a state of total astonishment.
A daring technical challenge
One of the most striking choices in the film is the depiction of the soldiers as human-shaped pigeons. The directors immediately embraced this approach with the aim of symbolically illustrating the contempt with which the soldiers were sent to the front, considered as nothing more than cannon fodder.


Conveying emotion through animation
Another major challenge of the film was to convey human emotions to these animal characters, a representation as rare as it is ambitious. To achieve this, the team focused on their facial expressions, giving the pigeons human eyes, thus accentuating the viewer’s empathy with their tragic fate. The lighting also plays an essential role, sculpting the image and reinforcing the immersion in this dark and tormented universe.

