Film Review
In what is arguably the most striking French social drama in a decade,
director Karim Dridi takes us on a fantastic voyage into a universe
that is as alien to most of us as the terrain of the planet
Neptune. The setting is the social dumping ground of Marseilles,
not far from the vibrant working class districts that often feature in
the films of Robert Guédiguian. The characters are aliens
in the truest sense of the word - people who live on the very margins
of society, in camps that are almost as degrading as the ones
constructed by the Nazis during WWII. These are the people no one
wants to know, ignored by the authorities and loathed and feared by
everyone outside their community. We call them gypsies or travellers, but
they might as well be unwelcome visitors from another planet.
Khamsa is not a polemic
on the plight of modern day gypsies, although such a film certainly
deserves to be made. Neither is it an attempt to enlighten us on
the traditions of an overlooked and mistrusted people - Tony Gatlif has
pretty well cornered the market in this area with films such as
Gadjo
dilo (1997) and
Swing (2002).
Rather, this is a film about childhood, specifically how
the traumas of childhood can be exacerbated when the stable
family structure which most of us take for granted does not
exist. Its focus is a rebellious 11-year-old boy who is
struggling to find his identity - not an easy task when your mother is
in her grave, your father is a self-absorbed alcoholic,
your social standing is nil and you are the
product of two races (half-gypsy, half-Arab) whose mutual loathing is
well-known.
Khamsa is
effectively an updated version of Truffaut's
Les 400 coups, offering a
portrait of pre-teen angst that is every bit as moving and
uncompromising. It broaches a number of important social themes almost
en passant, delivering its messages with an understated humanity rather than boldly
lecturing us on the failings of contemporary society.
If
Khamsa is an example of
social realism, it is a very different species of social realism to the
one that is purveyed by Ken Loach and the Dardennes Brothers.
Whilst, like Loach, Dridi captures all the sordid ugliness of life on
the margins, never shying away from the injustice and brutality
experienced by the socially excluded, he does so with an intensely
lyrical and humanist perspective. Indeed, the most striking
things about
Khamsa are its
sheer poetic beauty and its lust for life. The characters may be
at the bottom of the social heap but they are not miserable. They
are invested with as much dignity and vitality as any human creature
and their existence bears scant resemblance to Bunyan's Slough of
Despond. That Dridi is completely immersed in his subject
is apparent from the empathy that he appears to have with his
characters. Maybe this is not surprising, since he spent a full
year on a gypsy camp in Marseilles before he started filming, and
then spent a further few months coaching his non-professional
actors recruited from this site. In addition to giving authentic
insights into the life of a gypsy in modern day France, Dridi also
succeeds in evoking how a wild but sensitive 11-year-old boy would see
the world around him - not as some dreary social realist pit of despair
but a playground of endless wonder, teeming with possibilities.
One's life experiences are never more rich nor more keenly felt than in
childhood, and this comes across almost effortlessly in this film,
partly through the sensual cinematography, partly through Dridi's
life-infused mise en scène, but also through the true-to-life
performances from the largely non-professional cast. The star of
the film is Marc Cortes, who is extraordinarily convincing as the central
character Marco, having much the same impact as the young
Jean-Pierre Léaud in Truffaut's film. Unselfconscious
and completely untainted by histrionic artifice, Cortes reacquaints us
with the raw brutality and wonder of those pivotal pre-teen years,
imbuing the film with a blistering immediacy.
Khamsa is not the usual social
realist wet blanket, the kind of Loachian treatise that is intended to
make you angry and switch your vote at the next election. Far
from it. What it is is a compassionate cry from the heart, an
unpretentious, life-affirming work of great power and charm that
resonates with a simple truth: a problem child is almost invariably an unloved
child.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Marco is only eleven years old, but he already has a history of
delinquency. His mother, an Algerian, is dead, and his father, a
gypsy, has no interest in him. His reward for setting fire to his
stepmother's caravan is to be taken into care by social services.
Life with his new foster family does not suit Marco, so he runs away
and returns to the Marseilles gypsy camp where he grew up. Here,
he is glad to be reunited with his cousin Tony, a midget who hopes to
make a fortune through cockfighting, and Coyote, his childhood
friend. Marco's life takes a dramatic turn when he meets
Rachitique, a young Arab from a nearby housing estate who lures him
into a life of crime...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.