IMDb RATING
7.7/10
8.8K
YOUR RATING
Roger uses his son Igor to ruthlessly traffic and exploit undocumented immigrants. When one of the immigrants is killed, Igor is guilt-ridden and wants to care for the dead man's family agai... Read allRoger uses his son Igor to ruthlessly traffic and exploit undocumented immigrants. When one of the immigrants is killed, Igor is guilt-ridden and wants to care for the dead man's family against his father's orders.Roger uses his son Igor to ruthlessly traffic and exploit undocumented immigrants. When one of the immigrants is killed, Igor is guilt-ridden and wants to care for the dead man's family against his father's orders.
- Awards
- 17 wins & 6 nominations total
Rasmané Ouédraogo
- Amidou
- (as Rasmane Ouedraogo)
Featured reviews
This film was a gem and I look forward to seeing "Rosetta" by the same filmmakers, although I missed it back in '99.
The story has a gritty documentary feel in its depiction of lower-class immigrant experience in Belgium, but nonetheless is dramatically compelling because of the tension between the father and the son.
I haven't seen this side of modern European urban life treated in film this well.
The story has a gritty documentary feel in its depiction of lower-class immigrant experience in Belgium, but nonetheless is dramatically compelling because of the tension between the father and the son.
I haven't seen this side of modern European urban life treated in film this well.
I tend to think of any film in a foreign language as an 'artsy' movie, and avoid them like the plague. However, I had the good luck to catch "La Promesse" and I might have to change my thinking. The story is the kind that catches your interest quickly and never lets go. The film never adopts a high air...in fact, it's very gritty, which makes it that much more enjoyable. The characters are so believable you might think you're actually watching a documentary. To top it off, the morality play at the heart of the movie is done remarkably well. If you're in the mood for something different, see this movie.
One of the most amazing movies I've ever seen. The story take place in the quite ugly "all grey" suburbs of a belgian city and is about illegal emigrant workers.
Absolutely no music, just simple human emotion...
It shows the talent of belgian movie scene (here the Dardenne brothers) who make superb movies with ridiculously small budgets.
Check out their amazing new movie "Rosetta" who won the "Palme d'Or" at 99' Cannes film festival.
Absolutely no music, just simple human emotion...
It shows the talent of belgian movie scene (here the Dardenne brothers) who make superb movies with ridiculously small budgets.
Check out their amazing new movie "Rosetta" who won the "Palme d'Or" at 99' Cannes film festival.
7=G=
"La Promesse", from the makers of "Rosetta", is an award winning drama which gets down to business quickly. The film is shot with no frills and the hard edge of a documentary. It tells of a father and son, both of questionable character, who make their living on the backs of transient illegal aliens in Belgium and the schism which developes between them as they engage a serious matter of conscience. Viewers with an appetite for reality in film will extol this flick while fantasy lovers may hate its grit.
10eek-4
La Promesse is one of the best films of this decade. With its simple style and character-driven plot, one may think that the film comes from one of the Dogma 95 manifesto directors but it doesn't. The film's strengths lie in its theme of morality and responsibility and in its no-nonsense portrayal of the immigrant situation in Belgium (with reverberations reaching all across Europe). One can say that it's a coming-of-age tale--and in some ways it is--but when one thinks of the usual film categorized as such, the moniker doesn't match. Even the scene where Igor is being seduced by an older woman, while his father and his father's girlfriend look on, has no follow-up, no clumsy bedroom scene where we see Igor lose his virginity. The film makers just cut from the seduction scene in the bar to Igor the next morning back to his "job" at the dilapidated building site. Clearly, the directors are unconcerned with the staples of the "coming-of-age" genre. More precisely, I think it should be called a "coming-of-conscience" film. The final scene is at the same time heartbreaking and thought-provoking. The way they end the movie is a masterstroke because it forces the viewer to ponder what will come next, thus prompting self-reflective questions on what the viewer himself or herself would have chosen to do.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film underwent a digital restoration from the original negative by Cinematek, the royal film archive of Belgium, with support from the Fonds Baillet Latour.
- GoofsAn hour and 4 minutes into the film (NTSC) when Assita asks Igor to pour some water onto her hair - the sound of water hitting the ground comes before the water is actually seen hitting the ground.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Zingo (1998)
- How long is The Promise?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $592,543
- Gross worldwide
- $592,543
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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