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Ressources humaines

  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
Jalil Lespert in Ressources humaines (1999)
ComedyDrama

The 35-hour work week has all of France in its thrall. This film turns it into a feature about economic and familial politics. Frank, a business school graduate, returns to his provincial ho... Read allThe 35-hour work week has all of France in its thrall. This film turns it into a feature about economic and familial politics. Frank, a business school graduate, returns to his provincial hometown to take a management position in the factory where his father has been working for ... Read allThe 35-hour work week has all of France in its thrall. This film turns it into a feature about economic and familial politics. Frank, a business school graduate, returns to his provincial hometown to take a management position in the factory where his father has been working for 30 years. First Frank makes the mistake of actually asking the workers on the assembly lin... Read all

  • Director
    • Laurent Cantet
  • Writers
    • Laurent Cantet
    • Gilles Marchand
  • Stars
    • Jalil Lespert
    • Jean-Claude Vallod
    • Chantal Barré
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Laurent Cantet
    • Writers
      • Laurent Cantet
      • Gilles Marchand
    • Stars
      • Jalil Lespert
      • Jean-Claude Vallod
      • Chantal Barré
    • 30User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 19 wins & 5 nominations total

    Photos12

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Jalil Lespert
    Jalil Lespert
    • Franck
    Jean-Claude Vallod
    • Le père de Franck
    Chantal Barré
    • La mère de Franck
    Véronique de Pandelaère
    • Sylvie
    Michel Begnez
    • Olivier
    Lucien Longueville
    • Le patron
    Danielle Mélador
    • Danielle Arnoux - la syndicaliste
    Pascal Sémard
    • Le DRH
    Didier Woldemard
    • Alain
    • (as Didier Emile-Woldemard)
    Françoise Boutigny
    • Betty
    Félix Cantet
    • Félix
    Marie Cantet
    • Marie
    Sébastien Tauvel
    • Christian
    Jean-François Garcia
    • François
    Gaëlle Amouret
    • Frédérique
    Marie-Laure Potel
    • L'amie de François
    Patrick Baron
    • Un syndicaliste
    Patrick Pignard
    • Un syndicaliste
    • Director
      • Laurent Cantet
    • Writers
      • Laurent Cantet
      • Gilles Marchand
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    7.22.9K
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    Featured reviews

    nqure

    Powerful study of divided loyalties

    Despite the apparently 'dry' subject matter of conflict in the workplace, this is a passionate film. At times,the scenes are so realistic and so involved that you forget this is a film and are actually watching scenes from real people's lives (which is perhaps because many of the actors are no-professionals as in Bresson & Loach). The film does not provide any easy answers, only more questions. I found the scenes between the father & son very moving especially the one at the end where the father continues working at his lathe whilst the son first berates him for his failure to stand up for his rights and then hurls his father's work angrily onto the floor. A very compassionate film.
    7planktonrules

    An interesting and very French look at labor and management.

    "Human Resources" is a very French look at labor and management. What I mean is that it takes a decidedly more adversarial look at this relationship...something more common there than in the US or our films.

    Franck (Jalil Lespert) is going to be graduating soon from college. So, for his internship, he returns to the factory where his dad has long worked and Franck's job is in the front office...with management. He has arrived at an interesting time, as the relationship between the owners and the workers are deadlocked. The boss insists he's got the workers' best interests at heart and the communist labor leader simply wants nothing to do with him and her position is purely adversarial. Most viewers likely will assume this labor leader is an extremist...and it sure looks that way. Franck decides to try appealing directly to the workers...and he's wildly successful. What he doesn't know is that the boss really IS a duplicitous creep and he's using Franck. So what will Franck do when he learns the truth?

    This film is a tough sell for many viewers. A film about labor and management is NOT a sexy or exciting idea for most viewers. It also is very slow at times and features a direct-to-video look. Still, despite all this, it is a powerful and well acted film that gets you to think.
    8brook.jane

    A refreshingly humane film !

    Although the context for this film is the political tension surrounding the introduction of the 35 working week, the soul of the film lies in the relationship between father and son and its power to evoke folk memories of other, epic, generational struggles.This power comes not so much from what is said but from what is NOT said - looks, gestures, silences.This makes it sound as though the film is ponderous but it isn't: the context makes sure that there's plenty of action and there is a lightness of touch in the family scenes.The two struggles ( familial and political)are perfectly intertwined with each adding meaning to the other.The Human Resources of the title therefore refers not just the rather inhuman term for personnel management - but also to the resources which father and son find within themselves to cope with their respective situations.

    There is a naturalness about the location, the setting and the pace that makes this film a refreshing change from Hollywood High Tech. It is well worth seeing.
    9rtlusa

    excellent

    I am French and I am very proud when I see that such a movie can be produced in my country - It's not a movie with Gerard Depardieu, it's a movie with real situations and real people, about working in a factory, blue collar and white collar confrontation, family feud. Acting is great with only one professional actor, the rest being amateurs. I highly recommend it. It's not an easy piece. But it will you make think.
    9howard.schumann

    A deeply felt human drama about class mobility

    "You're not fired. You can stay. You're too young, too cheap to be unprofitable." -- Franck Verdeau

    Laurent Cantet's first film, Human Resources, shows the dehumanizing effect of mechanical labor on the relationship between a father and his son in rural France. The film has a strong political message but never feels sterile or preachy; rather it is a deeply felt human drama about class mobility. Jalil Lespert, the only professional actor in the cast, is Franck Verdeau, a young, handsome intern who works for the same company in which his father (Jean-Claude Vallod) has toiled for thirty years. Mr. Verdeau is a heavy-set taciturn individual who operates an automatic welding device that forces him to stand on his feet all day, bent over his machine and proudly claims that he can churn out 700 parts per hour. A member of the old school who does not believe in upsetting the bosses, the father is more compliant than most workers who still operate within the system but express their misgivings in union activity.

    Franck has just returned home from school in Paris. Eager to seize upon the opportunity presented to him through his father's sacrifice, he seeks to impress management and launch his career by assessing the validity of instituting a 35-hour workweek. Although he has made a good first impression on his shrewd boss (Lucien Longueville), he soon comes into conflict with union leaders who are fearful that reducing the amount of hours will lead to automation and loss of jobs. Torn between his professional obligations and his sympathies for the workers, Franck naively proposes a referendum of the workers on the issue. This plays into the hands of management seeking to drive a wedge between the workers and their union, led by firebrand activist, Danielle Arnoux (Danielle Melador).

    Arnoux, a real-life left-wing union activist, is an aggressive and uncompromising leader who does not hesitate to let management know exactly where she stands. When more layoffs seem to be forecast including that of his own father, Franck must choose sides between the militants and the father who made his job and career possible. Mr. Verdeau is opposed to the union and cannot see any benefit from a staggered workweek that would mean increased leisure. Their final confrontation about the father's passivity brings to the surface resentments about his father's social class that have been repressed for many years.

    Human Resources is shot inside an actual factory, creating an authenticity furthered by its cast of actual factory employees. I found myself deeply involved with the characters. In tackling an issue that Hollywood has stayed miles away from, Cantet has made us aware of the daily drudgery of millions of people around the world for whom compromise and submission is a way of life. The film never loses his focus, striking a balance between social relevance and a character study of deeply conflicted individuals whose work is reflected in their self-image. Cantet said in an interview, "The title Human Resources is a reaction against the cynicism of that expression. A human being is administered the same way you would administer stocks or capital. I wanted to play on that double meaning and go beyond coded administrative lingo in order to talk about an actual human's resources." He has succeeded impressively.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Same script structure as Oliver Stone's "Wall Street".
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Almost Famous/Crime + Punishment in Suburbia/Bait/Duets/Human Resources (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Quatuor N°13 en la mineur
      Composed by Franz Schubert

      Performed by Melos Quartett (as Melos Quartet)

      Published by Harmonia Mundi

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 15, 2000 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Shooting Gallery
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Human Resources
    • Filming locations
      • Aubevoye, Eure, France
    • Production companies
      • La Sept-Arte
      • Haut et Court
      • MEDIA Programme of the European Union
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $116,866
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $29,526
      • Sep 17, 2000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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