Film Review
Les Chiffonniers d'Emmaüs is a faithful
and highly poignant account of the origins of one of the world's most famous humanitarian
causes, the Emmaüs movement, which was the brain child of one man, Abbé Pierre.
Even before he founded Emmaüs, a charity for the homeless which is still active today,
Abbé Pierre was regarded as a national figure and hero in France. He had
played a prominent role in the French Resistance during WWII and subsequently became a
leading politician, winning a place on France's National Assembly. Up until his
death in 2007, he was one of the most respected and influential public figures in France,
a man of great faith, courage and humanity who was practically accorded the status of
a living saint. The creation of Emmaüs was probably his single geatest
achievement. It is now an international charitable organisation working to combat
poverty in 50 countries, including France.
This modest film goes some way to showing the circumstances and motivations that
led to the birth of Emmaüs, focussing on the characters who were there at its inception.
Although it has a political subtext (as Abbé Pierre's own personal introduction
to the film implies),
Les Chiffonniers d'Emmaüs
is surprisingly not an overtly political, or even religious film. The film's
main concerns are humanitarian, not political. Its central message is that great
good can come out of virtually anything, just as Emmaüs was originally financed by
discarded trinkets
reclaimed from the filthy
dust heaps of Paris.
It may not be a faultless piece of cinema - the striking
realism in some scenes jars with the conventional melodramatic approach in others (suggesting
that its director, Robert Darène, was too afraid to embrace realism through fear
of causing offence), and there is a mildly off-putting whiff of Hollywood-style sentimentality
in a few places. Yet, despite its imperfections, and thanks to some remarkable performances
(Yves Deniaud will make you weep), this is an engaging and emotionally intense film, with
a profound yet carefully underplayed spiritual dimension. The film's simple style
and heart-rending portrayals of human suffering make it an effective piece of social realist
drama, of the kind which was pretty rare in French cinema at the time, and a worthy tribute
to the men and women who have selflessly striven to make Emmaüs a success.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the late 1940s, Abbé Pierre decides to open a centre for disadvantaged young
people in a leafy suburb of Paris. Whilst the house he has purchased for this function
is being repaired, he encounters a number of social outcasts who agree to lend their support
in exchange for food and lodging. First there is Bastien, who has just left prison
only to find that his wife has taken up with another man. Then there is Etienne,
a hot-headed young man who has escaped from a centre for delinquents, and who is obsessed
with taking revenge on his father. There is Djibouti, an older man who became a
vagrant after being involved in a tragic road accident. These are followed by many
others, each man marked by tragedy and loss, each of whom discovers a new sense of purpose
in Abbé Pierre's project. But before the scheme gets off the ground, homeless
families start to turn up, desperate for support and a place to stay. Abbé
Pierre realises that a far greater challenge faces him - to provide homes and support
for those who have no means of their own and whom the State has forgotten. And so
the Emmaüs movement was born. But how will Abbé Pierre find the money
to make his vision a reality...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.