I had no idea what to expect from this movie but, to be honest, it did hit me like a truck though. With my film club, we do watch some really heavy movies from time to time (I guess we like to torture ourselves like that…) but this movie was definitely one of the most hardcore we have seen so far. It’s interesting that some other film club members were rooting for the main character to successfully come out of this endless vicious circle of violence and despair but, as far as I was concerned, even if I did care for the poor boy, I pretty much knew from the start that he was doomed (it is so weird that he was actually played by an actor called Thibaud Dooms). I mean, how could you expect any really improvement if you take a traumatized boy out of a highly dysfunctional environment and put him in just another dysfunctional environment? I’m not blaming the educators working there, they were doing the best they could with some f*cked up situations and I really did appreciate the hyper-realistic approach they chose to depict this environment but, at the end of the day, it didn’t seem to be a very efficient system. Coming back on Thibaud Dooms, wow, this guy was just incredible, so raw and so spellbinding to behold, I almost wish his career would end here just to make sure that he doesn’t have to go through something like this ever again. Eventually, the only thing that really didn’t work in this movie for me was the fact that the ‘bad’ guy, the real psycho in these group of messed up kids turned out to be Moroccan. Seriously, since it was a work of fiction, there was absolutely no need to give this character such a specific ethnicity, especially since there is already such a vile rhetoric about this matter in France, in the Netherlands and also in Belgium. Anyway, to conclude, even if it wasn’t flawless, the damned thing was quite unforgettable and it is definitely worth a look but you have to be able to handle such heavy material.
7/10
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