Film Review
The 1990s was a good decade for French cinema, with some great internationally acclaimed
successes and booming box office receipts in France. But there is one film that
stands out above all others for its impact, originality of style and success in tackling
a major social issue head-on. That film is
La Haine, only the second major
film of the young actor-turned-director, Mathieur Kassovitz. Kassovitz was rewarded
with the Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1995 for this stunning film.
The
fracture sociale, the problem of social exclusion, was (and remains) one of
the great political problems of modern day France. In this film, its writer and
director, Mathieu Kassovitz, suggests that the problem is exacerbated by political ambivalence
over racial minorities and unbridled hostility on the part of the police. The situation
is a tinderbox, with angry young men having no jobs, no money, no prospects, living in
cramped, poorly maintained accommodation. It can be no surprise when things flare
up once in a while.
The film has a very strong anti-police message (a point which Kassovitz himself admitted
- unpopularly - at the Cannes film festival), with some pretty graphic scenes of police
brutality and provocation. All this creates an impression of confinement and
intolerance, which seems to legitimise Vinz's almost pathological hatred for the police.
Whilst the most impressive aspect of the film is its directness, its presentation of a
major social problem in - literally - black and white lucidity, many other factors contribute
to
La Haine's success. The camera work is impressive, often veering towards
genius on more than one occasion, accentuated by some sharp and unsettling editing.
The central characters are played by unknown actors, with a conviction and feeling of
spontaneity that gives the film a documentary feel. Kassovitz's script and direction
appear to be the work of a far more experienced film-maker than his 28 years would suggest.
Few films have the good fortune to succeed at virtually every level as a piece of cinema
and still have something important to say about life.
La Haine is one such
film. That it achieved this on a budget of a mere FF15M, without a single
star name, is all the more remarkable.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Mathieu Kassovitz film:
Assassin(s) (1997)
Film Synopsis
This film follows one day in the lives of three unemployed young men who live on a housing
estate in a deprived suburb of Paris. They are Vinz, a Jew busting with pent-up
anger, Saïd a talkative Arab obsessed with "getting laid" and Hubert, a well-built
black man who dreams of being a professional boxer. They mull over the events of
the day before, when there was a violent confrontation between police and rioters, which
arose after a young Arab was brutally attacked by a policeman. Vinz swears that
if the Arab dies, he will find a policeman and kill him. He reveals that he managed
to purloin a loaded gun during the riot. The three young men spend the evening in
Paris, killing time and generally making a nuisance. When they return home the following
day, they are picked on by the police, with disastrous consequences...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.