| Index | 3 reviews in total |
15 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
The Only Weapon Is Friendship, 27 April 2000
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Author:
two-rivers from Ore Mountains, Germany
Madjid, a son of Algerian immigrants, and his friend Pat are condemned to
spend their youth in the dreary concrete blocks of a Parisian suburb. They
are seventeen years old and, as they have already left school, there is
nothing much to do for them. An incorporation into working life fails due
to
the lack of efforts (Pat) or the racism of the job center employees, who
do
not accept Madjid's unwillingness to adopt French citizenship. Not
surprisingly they both end up as criminals and alternately act as
pickpockets, car thieves, burglars, robbers or pimps.
But the descent of the young leading characters into the maelstrom of
delinquency is by no means the only topic treated by a film whose
intention
it is to portray as many facets as possible of this suburban society.
There
are numerous other characters, too, who all have their own tragic story to
tell. Just take Justine, a young drug addict, who never leaves his refuge
in
the basement of the apartment house. Or take Solange, an alcoholic
prostitute, who carries on her trade in the huts of immigrant workers. Mr
Levesque has alcohol problems, too, and when he is under the influence he
beats up his wife and daughter. Josette, on the other hand, is no longer
abused by a violent husband; she is left alone with her child Stéphane,
and
when unemployment is added to her distress the situation culminates in an
unsuccessful suicide attempt. Pat's sister is not out of work, but instead
of the office job she claims to occupy, she works in a Parisian red light
district, where one day she sadly is detected by Madjid...
The only one who seems to have come to grips with his life is Balou, who
used to be the class loser, and who finally ran away after he had been
teased one time too often by his mates. Now he returns as an upstart
underworld boss, in a classy car, lighting his Havana with a fivehundred
franc note.
This is only a small selection, but it illustrates what the film wants to
make clear: The world of the Parisian suburbs is grey and dismal, and
every
attempt to lead an existence that is worth living is nipped in the bud. It
is therefore not surprising that the adolescents try to escape from it. In
a
stolen Mercedes they drive to the sea, and it is there that they
experience
the wide distance that stands for a dream of freedom - at least
temporarily.
For the moment of ecstatic euphoria is extremely short-lived and is soon
ended by an approaching police car. Madjid is arrested without any
resistance, it seems as if he has realized the pointlessness of fight in a
world that has already determined their journey through life without mercy
and does not offer any scope for a positive change.
But the movie at least sends us away with a touch of hope. Pat breaks off
from his escape and positions himself at the roadside in order to wait for
the police car in which Madjid is held. When it arrives he raises his arm
like a hitch-hiker would do. For him the loss of friendship carries more
weight than the renunciation of a freedom that has proved to be an
illusion
anyway. If you do not stand a chance to hold your own in this world and to
fulfill your dreams, at least there is one consoling certainty to which
you
can cling: You are not alone.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Mehdi Charef challenges stereotypical French attitude of liberty,equality and fraternity., 28 July 2008
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Author:
Lalit Rao (cpowerccc@yahoo.com) from Paris, France
It is entirely due to Mehdi Charef that in today's French Cinema Beur filmmakers like Abdel Kechiche (La faute à Voltaire) and Malik Chibane (Douce France) are getting instant success and recognition.He is recognized as the trend setter of Beur Cinema for having given a distinctive image to Arab youths by directing "Le thé au harem d'Archimède" in 1985.His film won prestigious Jean Vigo prize in 1985.This film is based on the autobiographical novel written by Mehdi Charef for which Costa Gavras provided financial support as its producer.Le thé au harem d'Archimède talks about the marginal figures of French society for whom there are no opportunities to progress in life,no jobs to provide them with a decent living.These are the people who know that hollow slogans of liberty,equality and fraternity are of absolutely no use to them.It is the light tone of this film which will captivate viewers.Those who know French suburbs from "La Haine" are for a great shock as there is less violence as compared to Mathieu Kassovitz's film.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Archimides' principle, 17 July 2011
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The title of this French film comes from the famous mathematical
theorem by Archimides of Syracuse, a sort of play on words as written
by a student on a blackboard. The setting for this story is a huge
housing project outside Paris, something that might be another world,
completely removed from the city which is so near, but yet so far away.
The huge buildings in a lot of European cities are the home of poor,
mostly African immigrants. Crime seems to be the only way out for some
of the unemployed youths living in those complexes, as shown in the
film.
At the center of the tale are two teenagers without jobs who has
nothing better to do than do petty thieving, or even pickpocketing in
the transit system. Madjid, of Algerian background, lives with his
parents and siblings in one of the apartments. It is hard for him to
get a job because he is obviously not French, something his mother
refuses to do because even if they are in France, she feels nothing for
her adoptive country and has no intention of giving up her nationality.
Madjid, being thus limited, must learn fast the way of the streets.
His pal, Patrick, although French, feels no need to go into any job
that will pay him minimum way. He knows he can do better stealing
whatever he can to satisfy his basic needs. We watch him and Madjid get
into all kinds of trouble. Obviously, they have not discovered the
profit in drugs yet, so their world revolves around the housing complex
where they have become a pest most people would like to get rid of.
The film is hard to sit through because some of the violence shown, but
it gives the viewer a bird's eye view of that world. Directed with
conviction by Mehdi Charef, it is a chronicle of those areas that were
in the news in later years. Perhaps this helps illustrate the
frustrations and discrimination most of the people of those housing
projects live under on a daily basis. The mostly unknown crew do a good
job for director Charef.
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