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FILM

Seven great French films to watch

If you've got a free day or have a quiet weekend planned then you have the perfect opportunity to curl up on the sofa and enjoy a French film. Here are our recommendations of some of our favourites.

Seven great French films to watch
Cinemas are closed over the Christmas holidays in France. Photo: AFP

À voix haute (Speak Up)

What do you get if you follow a group of teens in France’s most deprived département, Seine-Saint-Denis, for six weeks of debating training followed by a prestigious competition? The result, which is extraordinary, is found in this documentary, directed by Ladj Ly (the director of Les Misérables, 2019) and Stéphane de Freitas.

Beautifully shot and edited, Speak Up gives a rare and raw insight into the lives of a part of France’s youth that not only often seen, growing up under the burden of economic hardship, but also the stigma of being from Seine-Saint-Denis, a Parisian banlieue infamous for its relatively high rates of crime, poverty and social problems. Mostly, though, this film is about the magic of words and what can happen young people get a real chance to thrive.

It’s from 2017, but it’s back on Netflix in France now.

Une fille facile (An Easy Girl)

A 16-year-old girl in Cannes, south of France, goes through a radical life change when her older cousin pops over to visit from Paris.

Her cousin, a Champagne-drinking, seductive 22-year-old with large hoop earrings and lots of makeup who “does not believe in love”, shows her a different way to live her life.

It’s an intimate portrait of young women and how growing up can be both painful and liberating, contrasted with the calm, beautiful landscapes of southern France.

Police (Night Shift)

It’s fair to say that French police haven’t had the best press in recent years, but this drama is a more sympathetic look at the challenges that police officers face, without attempting to gloss over the structural and systemic problems in the force.

It tells the story of three police officers who are given the job of escorting a failed asylum seeker to the airport for his repatriation flight. The film frequently replays scenes to show a different character’s point of view and doesn’t shy away from showing some of the grim challenges that police face and the effect it has on them. It stars the excellent Omar Sy, who is making a name for himself in both France and Hollywood, plus Virginie Efira and Grégory Gadebois.

Un pays qui se tient sage (A country that stays silent)

David Dufresne’s documentary about police brutality in France came out just a few months before the country embarked on a loud, polarised debate about the topic in 2021.

The film is particularly pertinent because it’s nearly solely based on amateur videos, most of which were shot during the ‘yellow vest’ protests. Dufresne has himself been an outspoken critic of the draft security bill that could ban such images in the future.

But the most interesting thing about this documentary is its form, which is centred around the choice to create dialogue in a time dominated by short Twitter-outbursts. The result is compelling, with a few unexpected moments of breakthrough.

Une Sirène à Paris (Mermaid in Paris)

A struggling nightclub musician finds a mermaid washed up on the banks of the Seine, so naturally takes her home to nurse her back to health.

This film has that very French combination of realistic storytelling interspersed with flashes of magic and fantasy – so while the ethereal mermaid hovers between life and death the musician has an argument with the receptionist at the hospital about whether his carte vitale will be accepted. Romantic, charming and weird, it’s perfectly French.

Stars Tchéky Karyo, Rossy de Palma.

Jumbo 

Objectophilia is the technical name for what afflicts Jeanne, the main character of this film.

The shy and troubled young woman takes a job at a fairground and forms a romantic and then sexual attraction to one of the fairground rides, the titular Jumbo.

For a film with a fairly strange subject, the film is actually quite down-to-earth as it shows Jeanne’s struggles with her eccentric mother and her difficulty in connecting with the world around her. The scenes between Jeanne and Jumbo are beautifully and imaginatively shot and surprisingly tender.

Stars Noémie Merlant and Emmanuelle Bercot.

Grégory (Who killed little Grégory)

This is actually a 5-part Netflix documentary, rather than a film, but it’s a fascinating look at a case that has haunted France for more than 30 years – the unsolved murder of four-year-old Grégory Villemin.

The very through documentary looks at the crime itself, but also what happened afterwards – several bungled police investigations, the appalling behaviour of certain sections of the media, the poisoning of community and family relations and finally another murder.

It’s not exactly light-hearted, but it’s certainly gripping and an excellent example of what the multi-part documentary format can achieve when done right.

 
These films are all available on either Netflix or French cinema club Lost in Frenchlation’s online film portal – the first is free, after that it’s a subscription service
 

Member comments

  1. Omar Sy rapidly becoming a big star? Where have you been the past few years? Since the brilliant Intouchables he has been the number one box office star in France!

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CULTURE

Iconic French painting to make comeback in true colours at Louvre

A world-famous painting of a bare-chested woman leading French revolutionaries is this week to reveal its true colours after restorers cleansed it from decades of varnish and grime.

Iconic French painting to make comeback in true colours at Louvre

The public will be able to admire Eugene Delacroix’s “Liberty Leading the People” in its full glory at the Louvre museum from Thursday.

“We’re the first generation to rediscover the colour” of the work, said an enthusiastic Sebastien Allard, director of paintings at the Paris museum.

Delacroix painted the artwork to commemorate France’s July Revolution of 1830.

He depicted a woman personifying Liberty brandishing the French flag and leading armed men over the bodies of the fallen.

The image has since become iconic, in the 20th century even appearing on French banknotes.

The French state bought the painting in 1831 during its first public exhibition, and it has been housed at the Louvre since 1874.

A national treasure, it has only ever travelled outside France once — to Japan in 1999.

Over the years restorers had applied eight layers of varnish in a bid to brighten its colours, but instead ended up drowning them under a coating of drab yellow.

The colours, “the whites, the shadows — all of this ended up melting together under these yellowish layers,” Allard said.

“Grime and dust” had also become trapped in the varnish.

‘Enchanting’

After six months of painstaking restoration — the painting’s first since 1949 — a bright blue sky has re-emerged above the Notre-Dame cathedral in the work’s background.

White smoke bursts from the men’s guns and dust more clearly clings to the air above the Paris barricade.

Benedicte Tremolieres, one of the two restorers to clean the canvas, said it was “enchanting” to see the painting reveal its secrets.

Her colleague Laurence Mugniot agreed.

“Delacroix hid tiny dabs of blue, white and red all over in a subtle sprinkling to echo the flag,” she said.

She pointed for example to the “blue eye with a speck of red” of one of the characters.

Because of its size — 2.6 by 3.25 meters — all restoration work had to be done on site.

Curator Come Fabre said specialists first thoroughly inspected the artwork using X-ray, ultraviolet and infrared radiation, comparing what they found with archive images of the painting.

The restorers then carried out tests on tiny fractions of the work.

Peering through a magnifying glass or microscope, “they even discovered that certain alterations, including a brown mark on Liberty’s dress, had been added after Delacroix and could therefore be removed,” Fabre said.

The curator said it was no wonder the painting had become such a symbol.

After the end of France’s German occupation during World War II, it appeared on banknotes and stamps, he said.

In more recent years, French street artist Pascal Boyart depicted Liberty leading a group of “yellow vest” protesters.

And adaptations of the painting have also appeared at protests in Bulgaria and Hong Kong.

“Delacroix’s brilliant idea is to have managed to represent unstoppable collective action in movement, with men rallying around a woman embodying the idea of liberty,” Fabre said.

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