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IMDbPro

Le jeune Ahmed

  • 2019
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
4.9K
YOUR RATING
Idir Ben Addi and Myriem Akheddiou in Le jeune Ahmed (2019)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:33
2 Videos
48 Photos
Drama

A Belgian teenager hatches a plot to kill his teacher after embracing an extremist interpretation of the Quran.A Belgian teenager hatches a plot to kill his teacher after embracing an extremist interpretation of the Quran.A Belgian teenager hatches a plot to kill his teacher after embracing an extremist interpretation of the Quran.

  • Directors
    • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
    • Luc Dardenne
  • Writers
    • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
    • Luc Dardenne
  • Stars
    • Idir Ben Addi
    • Olivier Bonnaud
    • Myriem Akheddiou
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    4.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • Writers
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • Stars
      • Idir Ben Addi
      • Olivier Bonnaud
      • Myriem Akheddiou
    • 14User reviews
    • 97Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 12 nominations total

    Videos2

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:33
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Young Ahmed - official US trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Young Ahmed - official US trailer
    Young Ahmed - official US trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Young Ahmed - official US trailer

    Photos48

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Idir Ben Addi
    Idir Ben Addi
    • Ahmed
    Olivier Bonnaud
    • L'éducateur de référence
    Myriem Akheddiou
    Myriem Akheddiou
    • Inès
    Victoria Bluck
    • Louise
    Claire Bodson
    • La mère
    Othmane Moumen
    • Imam Youssouf
    Amine Hamidou
    • Rachid
    Yassine Tarsimi
    • Abdel
    Cyra Lassman
    • Yasmine
    Karim Chihab
    • Conseiller philosophique
    Nadège Ouedraogo
    Nadège Ouedraogo
    • Educatrice
    Frank Onana
    • Fouad
    Laurent Caron
    Laurent Caron
    • Mathieu
    Annette Closset
    • Sandrine
    Madeleine Baudot
    Madeleine Baudot
    • Educatrice enseignante
    Bazil Jall
    • Le jeune enseigné par Ahmed
    Eva Zingaro
    • Psychologue du centre
    • (as Eva Zingaro-Meyer)
    Philippe Toussaint
    • Policier 1
    • Directors
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • Writers
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.64.9K
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    Featured reviews

    6claudio_carvalho

    Why Fanatics Stay in the Western Civilization?

    In Belgium, the teenager Ahmed (Idir Ben Addi) lives with his family and has classes of French and Arabic languages with his teacher Inès (Myriem Akheddiou). However, he has been brainwashed by his Imam Youssouf (Othmane Moumen) with a wrong interpretation of the Koran, despite the warnings of his mother (Claire Bodson). Ahmed decides to kill Inès but fails and is arrested. While under the care of the State, he works at a farm and meets the young Louise (Victoria Bluck), who has a crush on him. But she is not Muslin, and Ahmed scorns her. The radical Ahmed has an agenda and flees from his social worker.

    "Le jeune Ahmed", a.k.a. "Young Ahmed" (2019), is a Franco-Belgian production with a simple story of hatred. The movie shows an impressive demonstration of how teenagers may be manipulated and become fanatic by radicals. This is the case of the lead character Ahmed, who received and adopted a wrong interpretation of the Koran and is destroyed by his belief. My only question is why fanatics stay in the Western civilization, instead of returning to their home countries. This is the same case of fanatic racists that praise their mother land. Why they do not move back? My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): "O Jovem Ahmed" ("The Young Ahmed")
    8howard.schumann

    A thought-provoking and involving experience

    Over the last twenty years, the Dardenne brothers' ("The Unknown Girl") social realist dramas about the forgotten and the marginalized have been honored at the Cannes Film Festival with two Palme d'Ors, two Best Performance awards, one Best Screenplay award, and one Grand Prix. Their magic is still in evidence in their latest film, Young Ahmed, which won them the award for Best Director this year at Cannes. While it is a small film on a very big subject - that of Islamic fundamentalism - the film manages to deliver a thought-provoking and involving experience in spite of its 84-minute length and the broad scope of its subject.

    Set in a small town in Belgium, a country that has endured recent terrorist attacks, the film belongs to first-time actor Idir Ben Addi who delivers a remarkable performance as Ahmed, a studious-looking, bespectacled 13-year-old boy whose hangdog appearance and inarticulateness masks his devotion to a fundamentalist religious philosophy that takes no prisoners. With his youth and malleability, his growing adherence to what he considers to be a true Muslim is fostered by his relationship with a local imam, Youssouf (Othmane Moumen, "Bad Buzz") who rails at what he considers to be the growing secular attack on Islam.

    Without a father in the home to guide him, Ahmed personifies those whose obsession with ideology blinds them to their own humanity and that of others, taking on the imam's "us versus them" attitude even when it comes to his family. He calls his sister a "slut" because of the casual way she dresses and berates his mother (Claire Bodson, "Our Children") for drinking wine and not wearing a hijab. Apparently, Ahmed's transformation is recent since his mother laments the fact that just last year all he thought about were video games, but we do not know what triggered Ahmed's transformation and the film does not pursue it.

    We do know, however, that he is burdened by the memory of his cousin who apparently took his own life as a suicide bomber, a fact that the imam will not let him forget. The teenager's main source of conflict is with his teacher Inès (Myriem Akheddiou, "The Kid with a Bike"). He refuses to shake her hand because he thinks women are impure and because she is dating a person of the Jewish faith. He is also upset about her plans to use music to teach Arabic and the Quran, plans that he considers sacrilegious. Labeled by the imam as an apostate, the impressionable teenager tries to prove his faith by physically assaulting her, an action for which he is placed in juvenile custody. Even this is too much for the imam who tells Ahmed that he said to oppose her beliefs, not try to kill her.

    At the juvenile facility, Ahmed is treated with respect by his caseworker, psychologist, and teachers, but the viewer is left probing for clues as to whether Ahmed regrets his actions and is willing to change or whether he is quietly planning another assault. As part of his rehabilitation, he is sent to a farm where he is befriended by Louise (Victoria Bluck), the young daughter at the farm, but even her kiss does not awaken in him a feeling for people who have a different outlook on life. While Young Ahmed centers on the fundamentalist tenets of one religion, the film is not an attack on Islam but an assertion that any idea which considers itself to be the only true belief is antithetical to long-established ideals of tolerance and religious freedom.

    Ultimately, no words or actions of others seem to reach Ahmed. As director Jean-Pierre Dardenne put it, "Fanatics don't listen to the outside world; they build a wall between themselves and the world. Their only goal is for others to become like them, no matter the cost." Though the direction in which Ahmed is headed is unclear, it is in the moment when his body deserts him that we get a hint he knows that his only escape from the bondage of ideology is to discover the true nature of his own being and that his only loss will be that which has stood in the way of his deeper understanding of the world.
    8danybur

    Women as threat

    Summary

    In the current context of the resurgence of neo-fascism and with a World Cup about to be held in a misogynistic and homophobic Islamic theocracy, it is opportune to see the 2018 film in which the Dardenne brothers bravely tackled Muslim youth fundamentalism, establishing a successful cross between the psychology of the solitary leading character, the context in which he moves and certain precepts of Islam, without this being relativized or blurred.

    The women act as disturbers, opponents and challengers of Islam's religious and macho misogyny embodied in the impenetrable, resolute, fanatical and tenacious teenager Ahmed, a young out-of-place radical for whom violence ends up being as natural as it is inevitable.

    Review

    The film follows Ahmed, a Muslim teenager from a Belgian village, who does not hesitate to resort to violence based on his interpretation of the imam's teachings on him and the Koran.

    This time the Dardenne brothers face a thorny issue, and they do it frankly and without fear. I say without fear because they do not fear that by addressing the issue of Islamic fundamentalism they will be branded as Islamophobes.

    The film rightly establishes a cross between the psychology of the character, the context in which he moves and certain precepts of Islam, but without this being relativized or blurred by the former. They are three dimensions that enhance each other.

    There is an inevitable clash (and some irony) between the secularism of the Belgian public school and the objections of some Muslim parents who oppose for religious reasons the proposals of Ahmed's teacher of Arab origin.

    An important aspect that went unnoticed by the critics is the centrality in the history of women as threats, opponents and challengers of Islam's religious and sexist misogyny, as representatives of evil that must be avoided, combated and even eliminated. It is the female figures (the mother, the sister, his teacher Inés and another that I will not reveal) who assume the destabilizing role of an Ahmed who combines his fear of female contact with a religious precept that demonizes him, while the Imam Youssuf assumes the role of the absent father, guarantor of the rules, whose teachings the young man combines with those of a religious leader who follows the web.

    Another interesting aspect is that The Young Ahmed does not follow the process of religious radicalization of the adolescent, but rather the character is already approached with such a degree of fanaticism that it only remains for him to take him to the field of a violence that is as natural as it is inevitable for him. On the other hand, he is illustrative of how the system faces and seeks to redirect these situations, emphasizing respect and containment.

    The Dardenne resort to their usual dry tone, with handheld camera moments that reinforce a realism supported by the presence of actors unknown to the general public. Idir Ben Addi assumes the difficult and at times unpleasant role of an impenetrable, determined, fanatical and tenacious adolescent, with an opacity that sustains an unpredictability that adds elements of a thriller to the psychological and social drama, in a story that is even more disturbing to present to us. To an unincorporated fundamentalist who acts completely on his own.
    8michael-kerrigan-526-124974

    A return to form from the Dardennes

    I don't really understand why this brilliant film was seen by critics as a minor piece of work by the brilliant two time Palm D'or winning Dardenne brothers. I was hooked throughout. Their last two films, The Unknown Girl and Two days, one night were almost universally seen as amongst their best work. Whilst I enjoyed both of those films, they didn't hit me emotionally like others Dardenne films, such as the kid with a bike or L'enfant. Young Ahmed did. Young Ahmed - superbly played by Olivier Bonnaud - is clearly a complex character caught in the middle between Western norms and his interpretation of Allah. He's certainly been led astray by the most fundamentalist of interpretations of the Quran, but you never quite know if he's playing the game, or is genuinely sorrowful for his actions. And the result is a quietly disquieting portrayal of what, for him, is right and wrong, loyal and disloyal, life and death. And, as is oft the case with the Dardennes, there's no obvious answers. A return to form from my go to European auteurs. 8 and a half out of ten.
    8manuel-neves

    Non stop suspense

    While the main character could have a used a bit more character development, once we know his goal and his different attempts the suspense becomes riveting.

    Knowing quite well the events in France and Belgium of the past year I'd say that the film is a strong realistic representation of fanatism in a miniature setting.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This movie was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival, where it eventually won the Best Director Award, marking the first time the award was officially shared by a directing duo winning for a single film (although Joel Coen has won the award three times for movies he co-directed with his brother Ethan Coen where Ethan had to go uncredited per DGA rules).
    • Connections
      References Cars : Quatre Roues (2006)
    • Soundtracks
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      Performed by Intergalactic Lovers

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 22, 2019 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • Young Ahmed
    • Filming locations
      • Rue Chapuis 37, Seraing, Liège, Wallonia, Belgium(Graines de Génie tutoring school)
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Fleuve
      • Archipel 35
      • France 2 Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $21,291
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,216
      • Feb 23, 2020
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,522,606
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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