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The Son
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Average rating
(57%)
 
Starring: Olivier Gourmet | Morgan Marinne | Isabella Soupart
Director: Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne
Studio: ARTIFICIAL EYE
Run time: 101 mins
Genres: Drama | World Cinema
Languages: French
Dubbed: Italian
Subtitles: Dutch, English, Italian
Released: July 28, 2003
Also available on:

Olivier, a carpenter who teaches his craft to teenagers become obsessed with a new student, Francis. The reason for his obsession soon becomes apparent...

Rating of 4 stars out of 5
Radio Times

Belgian film-makers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne apply their uncompromising brand of social realism to the subject of masculine emotion in this unsettling account of a carpentry teacher's relationship with the teenager responsible for the death of his son. There's also an element of suspense in deciphering the nature of Olivier Gourmet's intentions towards student Morgan Marinne — is he looking for revenge or simply understanding? Aggressively employing a hand-held camera to reinforce Gourmet's superb portrayal of the bereaved man's fraught state, the Dardenne brothers explore the nature of pain, forgiveness and the notion of the redemptive dignity of labour, finally uncovering the potential for good in this most unprepossessing of settings.

Highest rated reviews

8 out of 8 people found the following review helpful:


Intrigue to irritation

pad from from London, 13th March, 2007

After about 15 minutes into the film, with the camera constantly following the central character from one room to the next, you are ever so slightly drawn in to what could be an intriguing film. However, as this film progresses, you end up becoming exasperated by this character and the way he behaves. The ending is also odd and I guess a trade mark of this director in its suddeness. By the end I was thoroughly annoyed and didn't enjoy it at all. I wouldn't bother.

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8 out of 9 people found the following review helpful:


restrained, thoughtful, fantastic film..

dafadddu from the north will rise again, 21st April, 2004

with one fantastic performance from Olivier Gourmet. With handheld and thoughtfully choreographed cinematography that blatantly avoids the obvious shots you'd expect. Spare to little dialogue - that allows the characters to breathe and exist believably. Superb.

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6 out of 7 people found the following review helpful:


Slow, Strange and then it Sucks you in..

A Customer from Launceston, Cornwall, UK, 6th April, 2005

This is a really slow to start film and you feel uncomfortable watching it but gradually the characters really grow on you and the ending is one of the most moving and emotional I've ever seen. Be in the right mood for a French Film and you'll feeling emotionally drained but very moved.

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6 out of 9 people found the following review helpful:


Wake me when it's over

Bill Hardwick from Cheshire, 30th November, 2005

I really didn't see the point of this film, in which basically nothing happens but does it very slowly. Obviously intended to be a character and motivation study, it fails in both respects as the main protagonist, the carpenter, exhibits rather less emotion than the wood he works, although finding himself in what, in real life, would be a highly charged situation - a situation, be it said, that is highly contrived and one which the authorities would presumably never allow to arise. Having plodded aimlessly along for an hour an a half, there is a sort of half-hearted catharsis near the end, then the film basically just stops with no sense of resolution or dénoument - indeed improbably with no real sense that the characters had any deep psychological issues to resolve. Profoundly unsatisying.

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Most recent reviews


subtle and slow

A Customer from Lewis, 4th September, 2008

Subtle and moving but pretty slow - really not very gripping, in spite of quite a powerful story and some good characterisation. Probably quite good performances, but of such taciturn characters that there's not much light emerging. Interesting symbolism too, not at all clunky. Ultimately though it's hard to enjoy.

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1 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:


Oh please....

RedRuth from from Wrexham, 5th August, 2008

Leaving aside the fact that the entire footage was filmed from the miserable lead's right earlobe, that no one smiles or laughs or has a proper conversation thoroughout, the thin plot and unsatisfactory conclusion made this the biggest waste of my time this year. Don't bother.

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True docudrama

A Customer from Preston, 30th July, 2008

This is the bonus disc for 'The Son' (Le Fils) and it comes as a surprise to learn how much thought and care went into the production of the film. The film itself was a little over long, but listening to the directors and the principal actor one begins to see how the tension was built up and the final resolution became more understandable.

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:


The Son

Javalg from , 18th July, 2008

Compulsive viewing... just because I couldn't believe how slow it was... not recommended.

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