Film Review
It's a frightening statistic. According to a recent report by the International
Centre for Counter-Terrorism, around three thousand people residing in France
have been radicalised in the last decade, and about a third of these have
already left to fight for Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.
If the French Prime Minister Manuel Valls is to be believed, the actual
numbers may be far higher than this (as many as 15 thousand radicalised in France).
With over thirty terrorist incidents taking place on French soil since 2002 (including
the attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices in January 2015 and the Paris massacre
on 13th November 2015 in which 130 people were killed) it's not hard to see
why radicalisation is the burning issue in France today. Filmed in
the immediate aftermath of the November attacks, Marie-Castille Mention-Schaar's
film
Le Ciel attendra is both timely and welcome, although, let down
by a weak script, it is unlikely to have anything like the impact it should
given the seriousness and urgency of its subject.
Mention-Schaar's film has two principal aims. Firstly, it attempts
to understand the causes and process of radicalisation - a necessary prerequisite
if we are to stand any chance of being able to combat it. Secondly,
it sets out to make those who are most at risk - namely teenagers, irrespective
of their social milieu - aware of the issue so that they are less susceptible
to the propaganda and brainwashing techniques employed by extremists, particularly
on the internet. Although the film fulfils this brief admirably it
falls somewhat short of incorporating these into a piece of cinema that is
likely to appeal to the masses.
Le Ciel attendra is an unwieldy
mix of public information film and second rate melodrama that struggles to
engage its audience and consequently is far less effective at getting across
its key messages than it might have done.
This is somewhat of a letdown after Mention-Schaar's previous film,
Les
Héritiers (2014), which depicted a class of children from the
suburbs reflecting on the horrors of the Holocaust. Far from engaging
our emotions as that film did,
Le Ciel attendra does just about everything
it can to repel its audience with its over-laboured didacticism and forced
emotionality (some scenes are carried to ludicrous extremes). The fact
that the film was co-authored by Dounia Bouzar gives it a certain legimacy
- she is after all the woman who founded the CPDSI, an organisation committed
to combating sectarian excesses linked to Islam in France. But Bouzar
does the film absolutely no favours when she appears on screen and starts
trotting out her by now familiar anti-radicalisation spiel.
Making up for Mention-Schaar's lamentable script and even poorer mise-en-scène
are strong lead performances from Noémie Merlant and Naomi Amarger,
who, despite some appalling dialogue, succeed in making their characters
frighteningly credible. The interweaving story strands that compare
the fate of their two characters - one redeemed, the other tragically lost
- owe their dramatic impact and poignancy to the conviction that the two
committed actresses bring to their portrayals of two seemingly ordinary schoolgirls
who are all too easily transformed into terrorist fanatics.
The more experienced actors playing the girls' parents - Sandrine Bonnaire,
Zinedine Soualem, Clotilde Courau and Yvan Attal - are less convincing and,
thanks again to some poor writing, merely exacerbate the film's sorry melodramatic
excesses. Were it not for the fact that
Le Ciel attendra deals
sincerely and intelligently with one of the great issues of our time it would
be easy to write it off as a maladroit misfire. Overlong, ponderous
and too deliberately pedagogic for its own good, the film scarcely deserves
a cinema release but it is to be welcomed for its contribution to an on-going
cross-media campaign to raise awareness of its subject. It definitely
merits being shown in schools (and not just in France), as part of a grown-up
discussion of the threats posed by radicalisation and how these may be countered.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Sonia is an ordinary 17-year-old girl who is easily led into becoming a Jihadist.
Fortunately, her involvement in a planned terrorist attack is thwarted by
the authorities just in time. Subjected to a programme of de-radicalisation
and supported by her family she learns to see the error of her ways.
Mélanie, who is one year younger, isn't so fortunate. A budding
cellist, she has the appearance of being a well-adjusted, well brought-up
teenage girl. But a chance encounter on the internet changes all that.
Influenced by crude brainwashing techniques, she is soon converted to the
cause of religious extremism. Her only desire is to leave France and
join the holy war against the infidel. Her parents can hardly believe
what has happened to her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.