7.8
After a dangerous sea crossing and a stay in a camp in Malaysia, the young Vietnamese Tinh and her family are accepted as refugees in Canada and arrive in Montreal where they begin their new life. But for Tinh, adapting has its share of difficulties.
Chloé Djandji
Tinh
Chantal Thuy
Nguyen
Jean Bui
Minh
Olivier Dinh
Quôc
Xavier Nguyen
Duc
Patrice Robitaille
Normand Girard
Karine Vanasse
Lisette Girard
Mali Corbeil-Gauvreau
Johanne Girard
Benoît Mauffette
Jean Girard
Eugénie Beaudry
Louise Girard
Jean-Marc Dalphond
Robert Girard
Richard Fréchette
Paul Girard
Marie-Thérèse Fortin
Jeannine
Julie De Lafrenière
Marie-France
Long Pham
Monsieur An
Benoît Drouin-Germain
Vendeur magasin
Ralph Prosper
Propriétaire restaurant
Stéphanie Germain
Serveuse restaurant
Xiaodan He
Serveuse restaurant
Brigitte Hébert
Cliente restaurant
Sean Lu
Monsieur Vinh
Marie-Josée Forget
Jacqueline
Viet-Due Duong
Grand-mère
Ngoc-X-N Phan
Père vietnamien
David Leblanc
Accompagnateur
Jean-Philippe Lehoux
Claude
Stéphanie Perreault
Voix féminine à l'extérieur du magasin (voice)
Maude Bouchard
Voisine
Elliot Parent
Jutras
Joseph Bellerose
Libraire
Annie Pham
Vendeuse itinérante vietnamienne
Nina Pham
Bébé de la vendeuse itinérante et de Kiet
Emma Bao Linh Tourné
Sao-Mai
Jérémie Corriveau
Voisin guitariste
Duy Pham
Luan
Stephanie White
Agente de bord
Laurent Pham
Réfugié vietnamien dans l'avion
Chantal Chartrand
Femme à l'accueil du centre communautaire
Jean-Léon Rondeau
Laitier
Charlotte Sales
Jeune voisine
Cam Poirier
Ouvrière
Anne-Lise Nadeau
Ouvrière
Louise Laurin
Guichetière cinéma
André Robillard
Spectateur cinéma
Antonin Bouffard
Binette
Director
Charles-Olivier Michaud
Novel
Kim Thúy
Writer
Jacques Davidts
November 28, 2023
9
8.5/10 —> 4.25/5
This was a great film. Very solid filmmaking and acting all around the board, but especially from the lead, Chloé Djandji, an incredible child actor, her first gig as well.
Chloé was stellar at portraying the reserved, shy and traumatized Tinh, showing clear acting abilities in the way she keeps the reserved demeanour, yet shows so much feeling and thought at the same time. We are also seeing things in her perspective and memories, leading to the interesting structure of the film, as well as how we see them. Particularly on their journey away from their home country
I really liked a lot of the camerawork used in this film as well. Lots of broad views and long shots, which is interestingly something I’ve noticed is very common not just in indie cinema, but in Quebec films as well, such as Les Chambres Rouges and Vampire Humaniste; its an interesting stylistic choice that’s more common here than elsewhere, from what I’ve seen. Its very well conceived cinematography as well. One moment I really appreciated was when they are getting onto the boat, and as Tinh struggles to stay afloat, so does the camera, since the film’s in her perspective. That was a great moment of camerawork. I also love all the shots where Tinh is standing and staring, as those are perhaps the most emotionally charged scenes for her, and where Djandji truly shines the brightest.
Tinh and Johanne have the cutest friendship, as well. Even with her still being shy, you can tell how close Tinh feels to Johanne, particularly when they cry together alone towards the ending minutes. Speaking of Johanne, Mali Corbeil-Gauvreau is also great, and has superb acting chemistry with Chloé Djandji.
The whole film is very grounded and raw in its storytelling and dialogue. It takes on a very shy slice of life approach while in Quebec, whereas in Viet Nam and on the way out, it is much more hectic and heavy, again influenced by the perspective of Tinh. Its thanks to this perspective that it all feels so much more visceral and scary. She and her family, as well as many, many others, went through much hardship to emigrate as refugees, and I do also want to note that, though it isn’t an experience I’ve had - it portrays the immigration very well from my life outside knowledge. Others may be able to correct me, but it feels very realistic to me. Particularly for Chloé, it is an immense adjustment - particularly due to language. One moment that hurt my heart was when she asked her mother to speak in their native tongue, but she refused rather coldly, and though we didn’t see Tinh’s face for most of that shot, the hurt was tangible.
I am definitely glad that I saw this one - it was well worth the viewing.
8.5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
French
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00