Film Review
Having pursued a successful career as an actor, Tunisian born Abdel Kechiche made a promising
debut as a film director with this good humoured yet poignant drama about an illegal immigrant
and his socially excluded friends during his stay in France. Kechiche was
honoured with a brace of awards for the film, including the Golden Lion First Film Award
at the Venice Film Festival in 2000. Whilst the film has its faults - some of the
plot developments are totally unbelievable and some of the characters are far nearer to
sitcom stereotypes than reality - it manages to paint an engaging and generally convincing
portrait of those social groups we rarely see in cinema - namely the homeless, illegal
immigrants, and people with mental illness. There are also some pleasing comic touches
to offset some of the harsher realism which the film broaches but doesn't seem to have
the courage to tackle too seriously.
In the role of Jallel, Sami Bouajila confirms his standing as one of France's leading
actors. Bouajila has both the physique and the personality to be convincing
in this kind of role, and manages to bring out in the film its three strongest elements:
its poetry, comedy and humanism. Élodie Bouchez is somewhat less convincing
in her role - indeed it is hard to see what exactly attracts Bouajila's character to hers
- but her skill in handling a very difficult part becomes apparent as the film progresses.
The film's most touching moments are the scenes with Bouajila and Aure Atika in the first
(and far superior) half of the film.
As a social realist drama,
La Faute à Voltaire doesn't quite make the grade,
but that presumably is not its director's intention. The film does have any great
political ambitions, although it may perhaps change slightly the way we regard illegal
immigrants and homeless people. Rather, it is a touching and humorous portrayal
of how people who literally have nothing form relationships and attempt to make a life
for themselves in a society which offers them little in the way of support.
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Abdellatif Kechiche film:
L'Esquive (2003)
Film Synopsis
Jallel is a young Tunisian man who travels to France in the hope of finding
a better life for himself. By passing himself off as a political refugee
from Algeria, he is able to get himself a short-stay visa, but he has no
intention of returning to his country of origin. He finds a place to
stay at a shelter that caters for the city's homeless and soon strikes up
a friendship with others in his predicament. Jallel finds a home from
home in a café run by some Tunsians. It is here that he meets
Nassera, a pretty waitress he cannot help being attracted to. A second-generation
immigrant, Nassera is having a hard time trying to raise her son by herself.
With his visa soon to expire, Jallel implores Nassera to marry him so that
he can apply for permanent residency in France. Reluctantly, the young
mother agrees, providing he gives her a large financial inducement.
By selling produce in the Paris underground, the Tunisian finally manages
to scrape together enough money, but on the day of the wedding Nassera backs
out. His dreams shattered, Jallel immediately succumbs to a deep depression
and soon finds himself in a psychiatric clinic. Here, he gets to know
a young woman named Lucie who is in a more desperate emotional state than
he is. All too late he discovers that she is a raving nymphomaniac.
Not long after he has left the clinic, Jallel runs into Lucie again - and
this time she is not prepared to let him get away from her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.