Les Misérables (2019 film)

Les Misérables is a 2019 French crime thriller film directed by Ladj Ly in his full-length feature directorial debut, from a screenplay by Ly, Giordano Gederlini and Alexis Manenti, based on Ly's 2017 short film of the same name. Manenti stars alongside Damien Bonnard, Djebril Zonga, Issa Percia, Al-Hassan Ly, Steve Tientcheu, Almany Kanoute and Nizar Ben Fatma.

Les Misérables
Film poster
Directed byLadj Ly
Screenplay by
Based onLes Misérables
by Victor Hugo
Produced by
  • Toufik Ayadi
  • Christophe Barral
Starring
  • Damien Bonnard
  • Alexis Manenti
  • Djebril Zonga
  • Issa Percia
  • Al-Hassan Ly
  • Steve Tientcheu
  • Almany Kanoute
  • Nizar Ben Fatma
CinematographyJulien Poupard
Edited byFlora Volpeliere
Music byPink Noise
Production
companies
Distributed byLe Pacte
Release dates
  • 15 May 2019 (2019-05-15) (Cannes)
  • 20 November 2019 (2019-11-20) (France)
Running time
104 minutes
CountryFrance
Languages
  • French
  • English
Budget
  • 2.08 million[1]
  • (≃$2.5 million)
Box office$54.6 million[2]

The film, set in the commune of Montfermeil in the aftermath of the 2018 FIFA World Cup, is based on a real-life occurrence of police violence which took place in the city on 14 October 2008,[3] and was observed and filmed by Ly. The story follows several characters within the commune, as a theft from a teenager spirals into the threat of a large crisis. The film's title is a reference to the Victor Hugo 1862 novel of the same name, written in Montfermeil and partially set in it; in the novel, Montfermeil is also the setting of the meeting of Jean Valjean and Cosette, a girl abused by her adoptive parents. The film depicts abuses against poor citizens, especially teenagers of sub-Saharan African or Maghrebi ethnicities, thus stressing the continuity in the fate of the poor in Montfermeil.

It had its world premiere on 15 May 2019 at the Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Jury Prize. It was released in France on 20 November 2019 and received critical acclaim, earning twelve nominations at the César Awards and winning four including Best Film. Among other honors, it was selected as the French entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards, eventually achieving the nomination.

Plot

The film begins with images of the crowd in Paris celebrating the victory of the French team at the 2018 FIFA World Cup on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées, perceived and celebrated in France as a moment of brotherhood among people of different social classes, ethnicities, and backgrounds.

Soon after, Stéphane Ruiz, a police officer who recently moved to Paris and joined the anti-crime brigade, is assigned to work with squad leader Chris and brigadier Gwada on duty in the nearby city of Montfermeil. Chris often aggressively abuses his power on young people, with Gwada complacent in that abuse; while feeling unease, Stéphane doesn't interfere. Meanwhile, Issa, a known juvenile delinquent, steals Johnny, a lion cub, from a circus, causing its owner Zorro to go to the local community leader known as "the Mayor" and threaten to return with firearms if Johnny is not returned. Chris and his squadron are tasked with finding and retrieving the cub.

One of Issa's friends takes a picture of Issa with the cub and posts it on Instagram, leading Chris to find out that Issa is the culprit. They chase, capture, and handcuff him, but he claims that the cub had run away. Issa's friends then attack the three officers, throwing things at them to stop them from taking Issa in. When Issa tries to run away, Gwada, having accidentally tear-gassed himself during the chase, shoots him in the face with a flash-ball. Issa's friends scatter, but the squadron realizes that they have been filmed by a drone, which escapes. While Stéphane wants to take a badly wounded Issa to a hospital, Chris and Gwada refuse, and instead, the trio take him with them in their search for the drone's owner.

The trio arrives at a local neighborhood contact of Chris, leaving Issa in their care and using information given to them by that contact to find Buzz, the person the drone belongs to, forcing him to flee before he can upload the video. Buzz, who still carries the drone's memory card, escapes the squadron and takes shelter with Salah, a restaurant owner and key member of the local Islamic community. Both the squadron and the Mayor, having found out, arrive at Salah's restaurant. After a tense confrontation during which Chris attempts to illegally arrest Buzz, Ruiz convinces Salah to give him the memory card, claiming that Issa's shooting was just an accident.

After recovering Issa and the cub (which happened to be spotted near them), the squadron takes the two to the circus. Although Issa is made to apologize, Zorro attempts to lock him as well as the cub inside a cage with a lion, scaring Issa into wetting himself and almost making Stéphane shoot the lion until Issa is eventually let go. Deciding that Issa has learned his lesson, Chris drops him off and warns him not to tell anyone what happened and, if asked about his injury, to say that he slipped and fell. In the evening, the characters involved in that day's event seemingly return to their normal lives, some with visible signs of distress and doubt. Issa, who had been told earlier that his father did not want him back home because of his behavior, sits alone on a ruined couch, traumatized. Later that night, Ruiz meets Gwada in a bar and tells him that he knows that a flash-ball cannot be fired by accident, and that Gwada had therefore intentionally shot Issa. Gwada blames his stress and the group for overwhelming him, and Stéphane, while unconvinced, leaves Gwada with the card, telling him to "do what you gotta do."

The next day, the squadron, while on patrol, gets attacked by a small group led by Issa. They chase them, falling into Issa's trap and ending up assaulted by a much larger group of young people, leaving them trapped from all sides in a stairwell and fighting for their lives. Chris is wounded when a bottle breaks on his face, and the backup car Stéphane radios for gets immediately destroyed by the young people, forcing the backup policemen to flee. They also attack the Mayor's office and end up clubbing him and throwing him down a set of stairs. Stéphane pounds on the nearest door, begging for help, which happens to be the door to Buzz's apartment; however, Buzz further locks the door. Issa lights a Molotov cocktail and prepares to finish the squadron off with it, leading Stéphane to point his gun at him and warn him not to. The screen fades to black as both Issa and Stéphane try to decide what to do next, and a quote from Victor Hugo's Les Misérables appears: "Remember this, my friends: there are no such things as bad plants or bad humans. There are only bad cultivators."

Cast

  • Damien Bonnard as Brigadier Stéphane Ruiz
  • Alexis Manenti as Chris
  • Djebril Zonga as Gwada
  • Issa Perica as Issa
  • Al-Hassan Ly as Buzz
  • Steve Tientcheu as The Mayor
  • Almamy Kanoute as Salah
  • Nazar Ben Fatma as La Pince
  • Raymond Lopez as Zorro
  • Jeanne Balibar as The Commissioner

Production

In October 2018, it was announced Damien Bonnard, Alexis Manenti and Djebril Zonga had joined the cast of the film, with Ladj Ly directing from a screenplay he wrote alongside Giordano Gederlini and Alexis Manenti.[4]

Release

The film had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival on 15 May 2019.[5] Shortly after, Amazon Studios acquired U.S. distribution rights to the film.[6] It also screened at the Toronto International Film Festival on 10 September 2019.[7] It was released in France on 20 November 2019 by Le Pacte.[8] It was released in the United States on 10 January 2020.[9]

Reception

Box office

By December 31, 2019, 1,7 million tickets had been sold for Les Misérables in France. It grossed $330,181 in the United States and Canada and $18,8 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $19.2 million,[2] against a production budget of about $2.5 million.[1]

Critical response

As of October 2021, 88% of the 191 reviews compiled on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes are positive, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Les Misérables transcends its unwieldy story with compelling ideas and an infectious energy that boils over during a thrilling final act."[10] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 78 out of 100, based on 35 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[11]

Political reactions

Le Journal du dimanche revealed that Emmanuel Macron was "upset by the accuracy" of Les Misérables, so much so that he "asked the government to hurry to find ideas and act to improve living conditions in the banlieues".[12] Jacques Dion, in Marianne, said that "[Macron] must never have heard of the Borloo plan [fr] for the banlieues that he himself had abandoned."[13]

People such as Jean-Louis Borloo support the film,[14] and Valérie Pécresse wrote in a tweet: "Proud that the region supported #LesMiserables a real film about the banlieue, which alerts us to the absolute necessity of a plan for the banlieues which does away with ghetto neighbourhoods, with a real ten year strategy!"[14]

Awards and nominations

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef
Academy Awards9 February 2020Best International Feature FilmFranceNominated
Black Reel AwardsFebruary 6, 2020Outstanding ScreenplayAlexis Manenti, Giordano Gederlini and Ladj LyNominated
Outstanding International FilmFranceNominated
British Academy Film AwardsApril 10, 2021Best Film Not in the English LanguageLadj Ly, Toufik Ayadi and Christophe BarralNominated
Cahiers du CinémaJanuary 6,  2020Best FilmLadj LyNominated
Cannes Film FestivalMay, 2019Palme d'OrLadj LyNominated
Golden CameraLadj LyNominated
Jury PrizeLadj LyWon
César AwardsFebruary 28, 2020Best FilmToufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral,

Ladj Ly

Won
Best DirectorLadj LyNominated
Best ActorDamien BonnardNominated
Best Original ScreenplayAlexis Manenti, Giordano Gederlini and Ladj LyNominated
Best First FilmToufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral, Ladj LyNominated
Best CinematographyJulien PoupardNominated
Best EditingFlora VolpelièreWon
Best MusicMarco Casanova and Kim ChapironNominated
Most Promising ActorAlexis ManentiWon
Djebril ZongaNominated
Best SoundArnaud Lavaleix, Jérôme Gonthier, Marco CasanovaNominated
César du PublicLadj LyWon
Critics' Choice Movie AwardsMarch 7, 2021Best Foreign Language FilmLadj LyNominated
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association AwardsDecember 16, 2019Best Foreign Language FilmFranceNominated
Deauville Film Festival14 September 2019Michel d'Ornano AwardLadj LyWon
Durban International Film Festival6 August 2019Best FilmLadj LyWon
Best ScreenplayLadj LyWon
El Gouna Film FestivalSeptember, 2019Audience AwardLadj LyWon
European Film Awards7 December 2019European FilmToufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral,

Ladj Ly

Nominated
European ScreenwriterAlexis Manenti, Giordano Gederlini and Ladj LyNominated
European DiscoveryToufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral, Ladj LyWon
Globes de Cristal Awards2020Best FilmLes MiserablesNominated
Golden Globes5 January 2020Best Foreign Language FilmFranceNominated
Goya AwardsJanuary 25, 2020Best European FilmLes Miserables - Ladj LyNominated
Grand Prix de l'UCC4 January 2020Grand Prix de l'UCCLes Miserables - Ladj LyNominated
Houston Film Critics Society Awards2 January 2020Best Foreign Language FilmFranceNominated
Independent Film Spirit AwardsFebruary 8, 2020Best International FilmFranceNominated
Indiewire Critics' Poll16 December 2019Best First FeatureLes Miserables - Ladj LyNominated
Jerusalem Film FestivalJuly, 2019Best International FilmLadj LyWon
London Film Critics' Circle Awards7 February 2021Foreign Language Film of the YearLadj LyNominated
Lumières Award27 January 2020Best FilmLes Miserables - Ladj LyWon
Best DirectorLadj LyNominated
Best ScreenplayAlexis Manenti, Giordano Gederlini and Ladj LyWon
Best CinematographyJulien PoupardNominated
Best First FilmLadj LyNominated
Best Male RevelationAlexis ManentiWon
Issa PericaNominated
Palm Springs International Film Festival2 January 2020Directors to WatchLadj LyWon
Best Foreign Language FilmLadj LyNominated
Philadelphia Film FestivalOctober, 2019Best First FeatureyLadj LyNominated
Rotterdam International Film FestivalSeptember, 2019IFFR Youth Jury AwardLadj LyWon
San Sebastián International Film Festival2020City of Donostia Audience AwardLadj LyNominated
San Francisco Film Critics Circle16 December 2019Best Foreign-Language FilmFranceNominated
Satellite AwardsMarch 1, 2020Best Motion Picture, International FilmFranceNominated
Stockholm Film FestivalNovember, 2019Best FilmLes Miserables - Ladj LyNominated

See also

References