A Prophet (18)

Film

Thrillers

prophet 2.jpg

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
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Time Out says

Tue Jan 19 2010

Filmmakers love a good prison. No, scrub that, filmmakers adore a bad prison. You can see why. For writers and directors, the volatile jail is a ready-made theatre, its prisoners and guards with their various conflicts and loyalties all perfect players for a drama that, if it tries hard enough, can reflect life on the outside too.

For French director Jacques Audiard (‘A Self-Made Hero’, ‘The Beat That My Heart Skipped’), a master of the old-school French thriller – ie thrilling and meaningful – his fifth film offers the chance to pull off both a state-of-nation primal scream and a terrific crime flick. He gives us Malik (Tahar Rahim), a French-Arab convict who enters a concrete-and-steel hell to serve a sentence of six years (so we know he can’t have done anything too dreadful). He tries to keep his head down, but this isn’t that sort of place. The ruling bully boys are the Corsican inmates, led by ageing but vicious César (Niels Arestrup), who forces Malik to kill another inmate in a very successful scene that’s one of the most claustrophobic and disturbing episodes I’ve seen in a long while. From here, Malik is César’s vassal, committed to working for him on the inside and, later, using a series of day-release excursions to represent his criminal interests on the outside.

But Malik is a clever individualist – a survivalist even – and at the same time that he learns to read and write, he exploits a friendship with another French-Arab prisoner, now released, to pursue his own drug deals and quietly invest in a power base within the jail. This is a world where partnerships are formed only for a reason, loyalties are fluid, friends barely exist at all. Politically, it’s a cynical film. Hope is absent.

Whether, though, it says anything meaningful about France, I’m not so sure. Malik is an extreme character, so his experience doesn’t reflect the French-Arab dilemma as a whole, even if the point is made about the number of immigrants in French jails and how being sent to prison for a minor offence can snowball into something else entirely. Audiard suggests that being an underdog – socially, racially, economically – in an unfriendly society can lead to desocialisation and anti-social behaviour. But Malik’s story is so wild that it obscures such ideas.

That said, it’s testament to Audiard’s skill at plunging us headfirst into a vicious parallel world that we mostly believe the film’s twisted logic and rituals. Also, his presentation of violence as a profit-and-loss account is effective and mature: while Malik’s initial murder may get him far, we witness nightly visions of his victim coming back to his cell to haunt him. But there are several bite-your-tongue moments. The film is realist in style and mood, but for every five spot-on observations, there is one flight of wild fancy. I’ve seen the film twice and still find baffling an episode in which Malik predicts that a deer will hit a car, thereby suggesting he is a prophet.

But the sheer force of Audiard’s direction can support such enigmas. It forces you, bullies you, persuades you to love his filmmaking style – even if not always to understand his motives.
42

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Release details

Rated:

18

UK release:

Fri Jan 22 2010

Duration:

155 mins

Cast and crew

Cast:

Tahar Rahim, Niels Arastrup, Adel Bencherif

Director:

Jacques Audiard

Screenwriter:

Jacques Audiard

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (32 ratings)
  • The reviewer seems to have missed the point of the film. The central character never loses his integrity and is subtely endearing throughout. He doesn't exploit his friendship with the other french/arab convict, as demonstrated by the ending and throughout, which I wont give away. Audillard doesn't suggest that being an underdog can lead to antisocial behaviour, and to say so incorrectly simplifies the film. If anything the film champions the underdog through bestowing intelligence, reslilience and integrity onto the main character. I saw the film and thought it was stunning, from your review it is like a completely different film.

    Tara Sat Jan 23 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Dear Mr Calhoun, While you're a decent film critic, I regret to inform you that you've lost a reader, who will be taking her film-buffery to a spoiler-free zone (who could forgive you for giving away the ending of Inglourious Basterds?) Perhaps if you shed some ego (few readers care about how you feel -save the "I"s for blogging) then perhaps you can begin to consider those looking to explore and support film. Ultimately, we are your audience.

    Hanra Sat Jan 23 2010
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  • d.logan has nailed it. However, it is extremely well done and the central character is brilliantly portrayed.

    ARCHGATE Sat Jan 23 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Exelent film !!!

    Jules Fri Jan 22 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • DAVE - u did give WHITE RIBBON 5 STARS THEN and 5 stars again in this new rating system -so you did find this was inferior to white ribbon -AS U have reduced a star here from your canny cannes experience -am i wrong ? i do think white ribbon is the most intelligent movie of the year anyway -so you did right -lolz

    usman khawaja Thu Jan 21 2010
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  • If you ever watched a single episode of Oz, this will disappoint - especially given the hype. Nothing new at all.

    d logan Wed Jan 20 2010
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • S Ford - Thanks for your comment. Just to clarfiy - I gave the film five stars at Cannes, yes, but that was when we were rating films out of six stars, not the five-star system we use now. Top marks for observation though! Best wishes, Dave Calhoun

    Dave Calhoun Tue Jan 19 2010
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  • There are some inconsistencies in review on this site. From my memory, Time Out gave this film 5 stars when it was reviewed in Cannes. Dave Calhoun, can you answer why this was changed? As critics changing your review (ie 5 star to 4 star) six months later denigrates your work, if there is mismatch as there has been here. Also, this review is very spoiler heavy.

    s ford Tue Jan 19 2010
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  • Reminds me of the first time I saw Taxi Driver, this film blew me away. The central performace is mesmerising and the tension the director builds up leaves you knawing on your fist. For me it's a contender for the best film ever made.

    Justin Hooper Thu Jan 7 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Please can you tell me the release date of this film in New York? Sounds incredible!

    francesca Simons Sat Dec 26 2009
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