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The Son (2002)

The Son (2002)
Member Rating:  
This downbeat drama by acclaimed Belgian filmmakers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne bears a thematic and formal resemblance to their previous works, La Promesse and the Palme D'Or winner Rosetta. Dardenne brothers' regular Olivier Gourmet is in every frame as the stern Olivier, a carpenter who teaches the craft to teenagers seeking a vocation. Olivier's drab routine is interrupted by the enrollment of a new student, Francis (Morgan Marinne), who becomes the object of the carpenter's inexplicable obsession. Speaking with his ex-wife, Magali (Isabella Soupart), about his new charge, Olivier reveals the reason for his fixation: Francis was the young street tough who murdered their child years ago. Now out of juvenile prison, Francis seeks to start anew, and eventually even asks the flummoxed Olivier to become his guardian. Olivier withholds his knowledge from the oblivious Francis, even as a tentative relationship between the two develops. The tense scenario leads to a climactic confrontation at a lumberyard, as the past finally catches up with teacher and student. This rigorous and deliberately paced film played in competition at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival, where Gourmet was awarded the best actor prize. ~ Elbert Ventura, Rovi

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Starring:
Olivier GourmetMorgan Marinne, (more)
Director(s):
Luc DardenneJean-Pierre Dardenne, (more)
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Son

This downbeat drama by acclaimed Belgian filmmakers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne bears a thematic and formal resemblance to their previous works, La Promesse and the Palme D'Or winner Rosetta. Dardenne brothers' regular Olivier Gourmet is in every frame as the stern Olivier, a carpenter who teaches the craft to teenagers seeking a vocation. Olivier's drab routine is interrupted by the enrollment of a new student, Francis (Morgan Marinne), who becomes the object of the carpenter's inexplicable obsession. Speaking with his ex-wife, Magali (Isabella Soupart), about his new charge, Olivier reveals the reason for his fixation: Francis was the young street tough who murdered their child years ago. Now out of juvenile prison, Francis seeks to start anew, and eventually even asks the flummoxed Olivier to become his guardian. Olivier withholds his knowledge from the oblivious Francis, even as a tentative relationship between the two develops. The tense scenario leads to a climactic confrontation at a lumberyard, as the past finally catches up with teacher and student. This rigorous and deliberately paced film played in competition at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival, where Gourmet was awarded the best actor prize. ~ Elbert Ventura, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
100 mins

Complete Cast of The Son


Director(s):
Jean-Pierre DardenneLuc Dardenne
Writer(s):
Jean-Pierre DardenneLuc Dardenne
Producer(s):
Luc DardenneJean-Pierre DardenneDenis Freyd
Categories:
Independent Films
The Son Awards:
  • 2002 - Cannes Film Festival - Best Actor
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    RAFAEL A R.

    I truly enjoyed this movie. Te actig was superb and the script absolutely astonishing and with mixed emotions. I recomend it highly. The hurt of the teacher for his son, and the compassion towards the boy that caused his son's death is handled so great.... Forgiveness triumphs over vengance..... great.. Rafael

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    Thea P.

    A tense, masterful study contrasting lack of expression, lack of emotion in communication and turbulent, powerful emotion under the surface. Mesmerizing.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Celia N.

    The Son promises 10 times more than it delivers. Period. What might have been an excellent movie concept suffers from the agonizingly slow pace, the claustrophobic camera work (always just 18" from the character's face) and the minimal dialogue which barely reveals what the actors are thinking. We kept expecting something to happen, but almost nothing does, and the little bursts of dialogue every 15 minutes barely advances the storyline. We watch a lot of foreign films and enjoy the 'non-hollywood' formula, but this was truly a disappointment,and as the other reviewer expressed it, a colossal 'waste of time'. Don't just skip it, avoid it!

    Yes   |   No

     
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