Couscous [2007] [DVD]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4688 in DVD
- Released on: 2008-10-27
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Format: PAL
- Original language: French
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 148 minutes
Customer Reviews
An intimate epic
I first heard of this film while staying with friends in Paris. It made a huge splash over there. They were raving about it. In France it is known as "La Graine et le Mulet", a title which far better suits this timeless parable. The story is expertly crafted and deceptively simple. Like the greatest stories, this one is archetypal.
Slimane is an old, poor and patriarchal North African divorcee. He repairs boats for a living until he's fired, at which point he decides to pursue his life-long ambition of opening a couscous restaurant on a boat, the chef being his ex-wife. Assisted by his partner's precocious daughter, Slimane sets about jumping the various hurdles that lay in his path. Out of this scenario, the writer-director wrings buckets of drama.
Essentially "Couscous" is a domestic drama, but that dry description hardly seems to do it justice. Slimane is like the titular character in "The Old Man and the Sea". He faces insurmountable odds but he quietly perseveres to the bitter end. He's no angel: he's stubborn and set in his ways. But he's all the more convincingly human for it, and you can't help but care for the man. In fact all of the characters are such engaging archetypes. This is, in no small measure, helped by the fact that all of the performances are faultlessly truthful and compelling.
This is a huge achievement by the writer/director. The camera, which never draws attention to itself, watches while the drama unfolds, it seems, totally spontaneously. It appears so improvised, but it can't be, the story is so perfectly crafted.
The storytelling is incredibly understated and the tension creeps up on you effortlessly and by surprise. In fact, I may've hit upon why the description "domestic drama" doesn't do this film justice. Because domestic dramas are so often bereft of. . . drama. And by drama I mean conflict and tension. They tend to confuse drama for sentiment. But this film, whilst it takes its time and never rushes, will slowly suck you in and have you glued to the screen until the very end.
Even if you usually don't go for this kind of thing, I would strongly recommend to anyone to give this film a shot.
Marvellous and touching movie
A detailed and at times very touching movie that takes us into the inner lives of immigrants in France. We share their hopes, their fears, their animosities as they seek to make a living in a host society that keeps them on the edge, at best patronising them ('at least they don't want to put up a mosque'). Each of the characters comes alive: Slimane, now too old to work, dogged by ill luck, but still determined to succeed in his new enterprise; the many strong and very vocal women who surround him; the young men with a roving eye; the elders of the community who pull together to help Slimane. Above all, this is a film about real people, employing a naturalistic dialogue that sounds improvised but clearly isn't - artistry of a very high order. My only complaint is that the film was a bit long, and spoilt by the rather gratuitous (and lengthy) dancing towards the end, somewhat reminiscent of a similar, but funnier, episode at Basil Fawlty's gourmet night.
La Graine et le mulet (7.5/10)
As a resident of France I was a little surprised by recent article in the Guardian by Jason Solomons about the re-birth of the French film industry in the wake of the nation's first Palme D'Or winner ('Entre Les Murs'/'The Classroom') in many a year. Further citing the international popularity of `Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis' (incredibly the biggest grossing film in France, ever) the article suggested an apparent purple patch for French film that could be the legacy of the Toubon law, legislation introduced in 1994 to promote and subsidise French cultural production. All this seems a bit of a mystery over here in Grenoble, since the large part of the French films produced annually appear frankly awful, and for every curious piece like `La Graine et le mulet', `Un Conte de Noel` and `The Diving Bell and the Butterfly`, there are hundreds more advertised that seem to test the boundaries of the banal: `LOL', `Agathe Cléry' ("Elle est blanche, raciste. Elle va devenir noire..."), Cédric Klapisch's `Paris', etc. Solomons argues that "the traditional French bourgeois drama is becoming a thing of the past". Such films, he adds, "have tended to fall into two categories: the country house affair, with large family gatherings on sun-filled terraces; or the urbane Parisian comedy ... ". Yet, the vast majority of French output still seems to fall roughly into these categories. To me, France is still capable, as it has always been, of producing at least a couple of excellent films per year, but the idea that we are witnessing a renaissance that can be traced back to the Toubon law seems something of a stretch. Meanwhile in the UK, the likes of `Atonement`, `Man on Wire`, and the films of Shane Meadows have done little to alter the perception that the British film industry is a dead horse due a good flogging. Mike Leigh's return to form, `Happy-go-Lucky` was quite ignored in the UK, but received a rapturous reception abroad, especially (ironically) in France.
One of the films cited in Solomons's article as a recent must-see of French cinema is Abdel Kechiche's `La Graine et le mulet', variously retitled `Couscous' and `The Secret of the Grain' for English-speaking audiences. A neo-realist drama set in the cultural melting pot of Sète, a port town in the Languedoc region of France, the film focuses on the trials of a extended, predominantly French-Tunisian family and the efforts of a taciturn father figure to better himself and unite his fragmented loved-ones. What struck me most about `La Graine et le mulet' is the oppressive proximity of the characters' lives, rendered through a relentless use of close up. We are not merely to observe the crampt quarters of banlieu apartment living, but we are squeezed into a make-shift place at the dining room table, elbow to elbow with the characters, implicated in their squabbles, their trivial banter. The sense of confinement is heightened by the mid-summer humidity, the sweaty closeness of the weather. The use of exterior shots is limited, and the authentic interiors are imposed on the viewer with suffocating persistence, so much so that at one point a jilted wife's verbal assault on the family becomes so unbearable we will the protagonist to leave, and he does. Without spoiling the ending, it takes on an equally oppressive but more impressionistic and metaphorical quality: an endless dance to satisfy narrow minds, and a pursuit that is the very essence of futility. Set to hypnotic but slightly maddening North African folk music, these two parallel threads leave the viewer gasping for breath and situations unresolved. A naturalisitc, memorable work, whether it indicates a paradigm shift in French cinema remains to be seen.
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