June 1940. The German army is sweeping through France. Parisians flee south in a panicked exodus. Among them is Odile (Emmanuelle Béart), a young widow and schoolteacher, desperately trying to protect her two children, 13-year-old Philippe and 7-year-old Cathy.
Set against the chaotic backdrop of the June 1940 exodus from Paris, André Téchiné’s Strayed is not a conventional war film but rather an intimate, psychological exploration of survival and the shifting nature of human relationships. Based on Gilles Perrault’s novel Le Garçon aux yeux gris , the film shifts the focus from the grand maneuvers of the Nazi invasion to the quiet, often unsettling dynamics of a makeshift family hiding in the French countryside. shahd fylm Strayed 2003 mtrjm awn layn fasl alany
For Arabic-speaking audiences, the film offers a rare, non-American perspective on WWII — one that resonates across cultures, exploring universal themes of displacement and moral gray zones. June 1940