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L'Esquive

Original title: L'esquive
  • 2003
  • 1h 57m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
L'Esquive (2003)
ComedyDramaRomance

Krimo a 15 years old shy boy falls in love for Lídia who is his classmate.To be able to assume his love for her he decides to take a part in the play that was to be one of his friends.Krimo a 15 years old shy boy falls in love for Lídia who is his classmate.To be able to assume his love for her he decides to take a part in the play that was to be one of his friends.Krimo a 15 years old shy boy falls in love for Lídia who is his classmate.To be able to assume his love for her he decides to take a part in the play that was to be one of his friends.

  • Director
    • Abdellatif Kechiche
  • Writers
    • Abdellatif Kechiche
    • Ghalya Lacroix
  • Stars
    • Osman Elkharraz
    • Sara Forestier
    • Sabrina Ouazani
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Abdellatif Kechiche
    • Writers
      • Abdellatif Kechiche
      • Ghalya Lacroix
    • Stars
      • Osman Elkharraz
      • Sara Forestier
      • Sabrina Ouazani
    • 20User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 16 wins & 5 nominations total

    Photos6

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    Top cast55

    Edit
    Osman Elkharraz
    • Krimo
    Sara Forestier
    Sara Forestier
    • Lydia
    Sabrina Ouazani
    Sabrina Ouazani
    • Frida
    Nanou Benhamou
    • Nanou
    Hafet Ben-Ahmed
    • Fathi
    Aurélie Ganito
    • Magalie
    Carole Franck
    Carole Franck
    • French Professor
    Hajar Hamlili
    • Zina
    Rachid Hami
    • Rachid
    Meriem Serbah
    • Krimo's Mother
    • (as Meryem Serbah)
    Hanane Mazouz
    • Hanane
    Sylvain Phan
    • Slam
    Olivier Loustau
    Olivier Loustau
    • Policier
    Rosalie Symon
    • Policier
    Patrick Kodjo Topou
    Patrick Kodjo Topou
    • Policier
    Lucien Tipaldi
    • Policier
    Reinaldo Wong
    • Le couturier
    Nu Du
    • Couturière
    • Director
      • Abdellatif Kechiche
    • Writers
      • Abdellatif Kechiche
      • Ghalya Lacroix
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.93.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8okurs

    Teen-ager lives in Suburbia

    Although imperfect from a cinematographic point of view, this film is remarkable as it penetrates deep into the lives of suburbia kids in Paris.

    All kids are from North Africa. They are boeur, which means arab in their bizarre dialect of french. I really doubt an old french man or woman understand what they are saying without subtitles.

    To love someone, to leave someone make deep marks in our souls when we are young.

    This sincere and honest film about teenage love should not be missed, if there is any screening available.
    7Andy-296

    Thoughtful but disheartening look at life in the banlieus

    This French film is a quite disheartening look at life in the public housing projects outside Paris. In a crumbling neighborhood with a majority of immigrants from Northern Africa, a high school tries to produce a play by Pierre Marivaux (1688-1763). The heart of the film is the budding romance between the vivacious blonde Lydia (one of the few "native" French living in the neighborhood) and the shy and painfully inarticulate Krimo, who is ridiculized by his thuggish friends for taking a part in the play. All the kids speak in an unintelligible slang, which makes a contrast with the classical French of Marivaux. I wrote it was disheartening (despite not being a drama) because it shows that the marginalized inhabitants of the projects have an almost nil chance of breaking into the mainstream of French society. Thoughtful and worth seeing.
    9randolphtaco

    Trapped

    This movie is getting fresh exposure in France thanks to its win at Les Césars, or the "French Oscars" as other countries like to call them. Its success will probably mean that it now gets exposure outside the country, too, and I wonder how successfully.

    Though an accurate and contemporary examination of France, the film's world is a foreign one, even to many people living here--the specificity of the setting (the projects, in a "suburb" of Paris), the language (rapid-fire, slangy, "vulgar", and peppered with "verlan", a street language of inverted syllables--the word itself could translate as "wardsback", and how anyone will translate this dialogue I have no idea), and the behavior (mostly arguing--strident, pushy, beautifully repetitive) may not play clearly outside of France. I'm not sure how clearly it plays here, or how willing people are to watch it, especially as it turns the idea of the scary bad French projects somewhat on its ear.

    This isn't a criticism of the movie; on the contrary. Kechiche has shot a riveting cross-section of teenagers growing up in social housing, in broken homes and poverty, who lack the tools of expression, and who have adopted the posturing of the wounded (and, in the story, almost entirely absent) adults who raise them, attacking (the movie unfolds at a near-constant level of verbal aggression) and dodging ("esquiver" means "to dodge" or "to evade") one another's attacks with all they can muster.

    The film's intensely political side feels almost accidental; in its unfolding, it has great heart, and its actors, who are apparently mostly amateurs from around the shooting location, are outstanding. On the whole, it reminded me a great deal of David Gordon Green's George Washington: a simple love story set against a landscape of poverty, played out frankly and honestly, allowed to unfold at a distinctly un-Hollywoodian rhythm. If Green's film is more beautiful cinematic ally, L'Esquive is more concentrated, more unflinching in its examination of the deep repercussions and violence of economic, social, and familial hardship. Its statement that France is no longer a country of the French-of-French-ancestry, and that its refusal to accept its own transformation does not mean its lost generation accepts its loss, could not be more clearly nor more poignantly made.

    Without spoiling or going into detail, there are things about the plot that are implausible, things that probably hurt the film overall, but watching this movie for plot is like watching Ocean's Eleven for social insight. This is a positive study of character in a bad situation, of a stratum of society rarely filmed and still more rarely treated as fairly as it is offered up here, beautifully and eloquently.
    7noralee

    18th Century French Classic Effectively Transposed to Immigrant Kids Today

    "Games of Love and Chance (L'Esquive)" is an involving experiment in giving classic French comedy of errors relevance to today, in a dramatic demonstration of "Plus ça change, plus c'est la meme chose" -- the more things change, the more they stay the same.

    Writer/director Abdellatif Kechiche juxtaposes the titular 18th century work by Marivaux with junior high kids in a poor, inner city Arab immigrant neighborhood, for an effect that crosses Larry Clark's "Kids" with "Mad Hot Ballroom." Like any period farce, the real relationships are dizzyingly circular: A loves B who loves C who is in disguise with D. A threatens C, B changes places with D to pursue his suit and use Marivaux like Cyrano, C can't make up her mind, friends of B and C misunderstand everyone, and the course of true love doesn't run smooth.

    While marred by wincingly heavy-handed intellectualizing on class social criticism by the literature teacher who is directing the kids in the play and a deus ex machina insertion of biased cops, the frank life and death-ness of adolescent romance strongly comes through in comparison to Marivaux's mannered floweriness, even as these kids communicate amongst each other with four letter obscenities, bluntly crude slang (that may not be too well represented in the English subtitles but I'm sure French subtitlers likewise have trouble with the patois in movies such as "Four Brothers"), heart-tugging looks of longing, painfully hurt tears, and, finally in frustration, physical action.

    It is not clear if "the blonde" as she is referred to in the English subtitles (played by the excellent Sara Forestier, who seems to have been the only member of the cast with some previous experience before the cameras) is also from an immigrant family or Muslim, or if she just picked up use of a couple of Muslim catch phrases in her slang as to whether Kechiche is adding another layer of social commentary. Or she could just be part of the trend in French cinema to fixate on pouty young blonde temptresses, viz. "La Petite Lili," "À Tout de Suite (Right Now)," "Lila Says (Lila dit ça)."

    This film has a lot of parallels with "Lila Says (Lila dit ça)," not just about sex and social setting, though it dealt with older kids, but also how literature can be an escapist outlet yet also a threat that brings hidden emotions to the fore.

    The grim mise en scene makes wonderful use of a crowded, high rise neighborhood where the kids hang out chilled because they have little privacy at home, some fathers are in jail, their loving mothers try to keep tabs on them, and cell phones are their expensive lifelines.

    While the film goes on a bit too long as scenes meander, probably because it isn't clear how much has been scripted and how much the kids are very effectively improvising particulars around a basic story line, their relationships are enthralling, both the romances and the friendships. Each teen actor creates an indelible and different character.

    270 years since Marivaux and the human heart hasn't changed.
    9cinemindal

    It deserves theirs rewards...

    I think this film deserve theirs Césars for a lot of reasons. The actors are excellent, especially Sara Forestier who's not from suburbs and has learned all words of this 'particular' vocabulary. The screenplay is very well, finally that's a play in a play ("le Jeu De l'Amour Et Du Hasard" written by Marivaux). This film shows almost the reality, is sometimes funny. The french teacher is disgusting, she is exactly what the director wants to fight : a society were there is no hope for an inhabitant of suburbs. As to her, Kremo is an idiot because he will never be Arlequin, he 'll never be in love and he doesn't even know how to play it. The film shows how wrong it is... The low point of the film is the sound, very bad, I think they wanted to be more realistic but that could be better, and realistic. This film is well to see, everyone can learn something.Even for french the language is hard to understand(sometimes we would have wanted subtitles!). I don't think the foreigners (particularly the ones who watch only blockbusters) will enjoy, or/and understand. But this freshly film is worth to be seen with attention.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The movie is dedicated Slaheddine.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Leçon de cinéma: Arnaud Desplechin et Mathieu Amalric (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Warini Werak Tergoud
      Performed by Cheba Zahouania

      Written and Composed by Cheikha Rimitti

      Production: MLP / History

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 7, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Votre bouche avec la mienne
    • Filming locations
      • Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, France(Cité des Francs-Moisins: housing complex, Rue du M.al Lyautey: police control)
    • Production companies
      • Lola Films
      • Noé Productions
      • CinéCinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,085
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,529
      • Sep 4, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,747,263
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 57 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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