Saint omer1/28/2024 “Won the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival and has been chosen as France’s official submission for the Oscars. “A visually arresting courtroom set drama… shot with beguiling patience.” The slow, deepening scorch of SAINT OMER is about how little we can ever truly know anyone.” Lit like a Rembrandt portrait in an ocher cardigan… The constraint rumble of covert racist prejudice invades even this scrupulously run courtroom. (With) Kayjie Kagame’s superbly still and watchful performance… (and) a riveting Guslagie Malanda. Forged in the hypnotically absorbing, painterly long takes of Claire Mathon’s inscrutably calm camera, edited by Amrita David with an intimacy that feels at times like the slow thump of your heartbeat… the film inhabits a shockingly strange and sad story from inside. Positioned on a mesmerizingly steady axis, stretching as though along a fascinated gaze, between the defendant and a courtroom observer. Deceptively austere, extraordinarily multifaceted fiction. “A quietly momentous French courtroom drama that subtly but radically rewrites the rules of the game.Diop’s extraordinary fiction debut… casually reinvents a wrenching new grammar for the true-life tragedy genre. As expansive as it is claustrophobic, SAINT OMER tears the heart and boggles the mind.” Guslagie Malanda’s performance contains worlds, as it were. It is rare for a film to pack so many layers of meaning into its first two images, but Diop’s storytelling choices are extraordinary from beginning to end. Plumbs the depth of the mother-child dyad and the anguish of separation from family, culture, and self. With remarkable stealth and concentration, Diop rewires the generic circuitry of the courtroom drama, avoiding its natural inclination toward sensationalism and grandstanding.” A stunner of a narrative debut… probes the mysteries of the seen and the unseen. “A complex and brilliant film… Diop creates a wide-ranging and probing drama… to explore such critical matters as the nature of personal and national identity, the multigenerational traumas of migration, France’s ongoing political and cultural failures to reflect its ethnic and racial diversity, and, centrally, the very power of language to create images and to embody realities… mightily inventive cinematic craft.” Is the accused a liar, a victim, a sorceress, or all of the above? In her first narrative feature, Senegalese-French documentarian Alice Diop uses her sharp eye for political realism to craft a captivating portrait of motherhood amid cultural isolation. I hope this trial can help me understand.” What would compel such a shocking act, and why would an accomplished writer obsessively attend the woman’s trial? The complex mysteries at the heart of this absorbing, wholly original take on both the courtroom drama and the African immigrant experience, unfold like a Russian nesting doll of gazes and projections. When asked why she killed her infant daughter, the accused, a young Senegalese-French woman – a PhD student writing on Wittgenstein – answers, “I don’t know. Shortlisted for the 2023 Academy Award® for International Feature Film.
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