8.1
After a chaotic night of rioting in a marginal suburb of Paris, three young friends, Vinz, Hubert and Saïd, wander around unoccupied waiting for news about the state of health of a mutual friend who has been seriously injured when confronting the police.
Vincent Cassel
Vinz
Hubert Koundé
Hubert
Saïd Taghmaoui
Saïd
Abdel Ahmed Ghili
Abdel
Solo
Santo
Joseph Momo
Ordinary Man
Héloïse Rauth
Sarah
Rywka Wajsbrot
Vinz's Grandmother
Olga Abrego
Vinz's Aunt
Laurent Labasse
Cook
Choukri Gabteni
Saïd's Brother
Nabil Ben Mhamed
Joking Boy
Benoît Magimel
Benoît
Médard Niang
Médard
Arash Mansour
Arash
Abdel-Moulah Boujdouni
Young Businessman
Mathilde Vitry
Journalist
Christian Moro
CRS TV Journalist
Édouard Montoute
Darty
JiBi
Roundabout Man
Félicité Wouassi
Hubert's Mother
Fatou Thioune
Hubert's Sister
Thang-Long
Grocer
Cut Killer
DJ
Sabrina Houicha
Saïd's Sister
Sandor Weltmann
Vinz's Double
François Levantal
'Astérix'
Julie Mauduech
Art Gallery Girl #1
Karin Viard
Art Gallery Girl #2
Peter Kassovitz
Art Gallery Owner
Christophe Rossignon
Taxi Driver
Vincent Lindon
Really Drunk Man
Mathieu Kassovitz
Young Skin
Anthony Souter
Skin #1
Florent Lavandeira
Skin #2
Teddy Marques
Skin #3
Samir Khelif
Skin #4
Tadek Lokcinski
Toilette Man
Virginie Montel
Subway Homeless
Andrée Damant
Concierge
Marcel Marondo
Club Bouncer
Karim Belkhadra
Samir
Marc Duret
Inspector 'Notre-Dame'
Eric Pujol
Assistant Police Officer
Philippe Nahon
Roof Police Chief
Sébastien Tavel
Hospital Young Police Officer
François Toumarkine
Hospital Police Chief
José Dalmat
Hospital Police Officer #1
Zinedine Soualem
Paris Plainclothes Police Officer #1
Bernie Bonvoisin
Paris Plainclothes Police Officer #2
Cyril Ancelin
Paris Plainclothes Police Officer #3
Patrick Médioni
Cave CRS Officer
Director, Screenplay
Mathieu Kassovitz
September 1, 2018
7
Matthieu Kassowitz's <i>La Haine</i> (Hate) is a portrait of youth disenfranchisement and the ensuing rage set in the public housing projects outside Paris. Before this film was released, many foreign viewers knew only the well-dressed, white, reserved and educated France depicted in e.g. films of the 1960s New Wave. Even many French people were unaware of the darker undercurrents of their own society, as no film had dared to handle this subject matter before. <i>La Haine</i> was a bombshell. While shot in 1995, it remains entirely topical today, as riots have continued to make the news in recent years.
<i>La Haine</i> follows one day in the lives of three young men of different ethnic backgrounds all born and raised in one particular housing project: the aggressive Jew Vinz (Vincent Cassell), the insecure, clownish Arab Saïd (Saïd Taghmaoui) and the more level-headed, pensive sub-Saharan African Hubert (Hubert Koundé). The film opens on a spring morning, in the aftermath of a riot which has rocked these youths' housing project. Some cars and buildings are destroyed, and the news reports that a police officer has lost his gun in the chaos of the night before. During the 24-hour period before the film's shocking ending, this trio tours the bittersweet environment of their housing project (violence and poverty on one hand, loving families on the other) and, in an effort to pick up money owed to them, they navigate the alien environment (rich, educated, white) of downtown Paris.
This is not only a revelatory film in showing viewers a side of France they had never seen before, but it is also extremely entertaining. The performances by these relatively unexperienced actors are totally convincing, Vincent Cassell in particular. Kassowitz shuns his country's own film tradition and instead sculpts the action under inspiration from the USA. However, the "urban", "hip-hop" aesthetic he employs does not lower the film to the more vacuous Hollywood productions but instead is at the level of Spike Lee and Scorsese. The director's decision to print the film in black and white has imbued it with a gravitas that makes it timeless. That said, in spite of the fine acting and ethnographic detail, the plot itself is rather mundane, which holds me back from giving this too high a rating.