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IMDbPro

L'enfant

  • 2005
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
20K
YOUR RATING
Jérémie Renier and Déborah François in L'enfant (2005)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:42
1 Video
47 Photos
CrimeDramaRomance

Bruno and Sonia, a young couple living off her benefit and the thefts committed by his gang, have a new source of money: their newborn son.Bruno and Sonia, a young couple living off her benefit and the thefts committed by his gang, have a new source of money: their newborn son.Bruno and Sonia, a young couple living off her benefit and the thefts committed by his gang, have a new source of money: their newborn son.

  • Directors
    • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
    • Luc Dardenne
  • Writers
    • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
    • Luc Dardenne
  • Stars
    • Jérémie Renier
    • Déborah François
    • Jérémie Segard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    20K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • Writers
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • Stars
      • Jérémie Renier
      • Déborah François
      • Jérémie Segard
    • 84User reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 14 wins & 21 nominations total

    Videos1

    L'Enfant
    Trailer 1:42
    L'Enfant

    Photos47

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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Jérémie Renier
    Jérémie Renier
    • Bruno
    Déborah François
    Déborah François
    • Sonia
    Jérémie Segard
    • Steve
    Fabrizio Rongione
    Fabrizio Rongione
    • Jeune Bandit
    Olivier Gourmet
    Olivier Gourmet
    • Policier en civil
    Anne Gerard
    • Commerçante
    • (as Anne Gérard)
    Bernard Marbaix
    • Commerçant
    Jean-Claude Boniverd
    • Le Policier en civil
    Frédéric Bodson
    • Bandit plus âgé
    Marie-Rose Roland
    • Une infirmière
    Leon Michaux
    • Policier Commissariat
    • (as Léon Michaux)
    Delphine Tomson
    • La fille aux cheveux rouges
    Stéphane Marsin
    • Jeune Homme
    Samuel De Ryck
    • Thomas
    François Olivier
    • Remy
    Hicham Tiberkanine
    • Abdel
    Hachemi Haddad
    • La concierge du toit
    Stéphane Bissot
    • La receleuse
    • Directors
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • Writers
      • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
      • Luc Dardenne
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews84

    7.419.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7ikanboy

    A look at the bleak side of low life.

    L'infant belongs to Sophie and Bruno, both feckless, petty criminals, in a seedy Belgian city. She has just come out of prison (?)with the newborn. She goes to their apartment but finds that Bruno has sublet the place to a bilious couple, so she has to track Bruno down at work trying to cadge small change from passers by. He is pleased to see her but diffident towards his son: Jimmy.

    They spend the night in a shelter, or rather she does, as he cuts his time short to fence his stolen goods to a woman who drops a hint that if they're not up to raising a child they could adopt it out for a good price.

    After showing us how they can only seem to communicate through adolescent rough housing, we are left with the distinct impression that they are too immature for parenthood. A few days later, while they wait in line, Bruno offers to walk the baby. He then sells it to a baby selling gang, and returns to show Sophie the wad of cash. Sophie passes out from shock.

    We see not one wit of shame or guilt from Bruno up to this point. He is, we presume, an amoral street thug, out for how to make the next buck, and found the baby to good an opportunity to pass up for a sizable reward. Besides, given the empty life the baby will be looking forward to, the adoption by a better off couple doesn't seem to be bad for the child.

    Sophie passing out seems to bring him to his senses. Is he remorseful? Does he love her? Up to this point all we have seen of their relationship is one of two vapid adolescent children, with no hint of any plans to make a future for their off-spring.

    He carries her to a hospital and starts calling his go between to have the deal undone. At this point his motivation is left deliberately unclear. Is he doing so because he regrets his actions and needs to make it up to Sophie, or is he doing it because her accusations are over heard by the staff and the police will soon be carting him off to jail? In any event he manages to get the child back, giving up the E5,000 without a whimper, but then faces the angry brokers who are now out their E5,000. When he returns to the hospital with the baby the police are there and he makes up the story that he was just pretending to sell the child as revenge for her infidelity, and then calmly disowns the child as his.

    Sophie refuses to talk with him and the police have to back off, and at this point in the movie we are no clearer to discerning any hint of empathy stirring in Bruno's pock marked face. I felt sorry for Sophie in her realization that her lover is as calloused as his feet, but presumed she would soon allow him back into her life. Yet as morally revolted as I was by Bruno, I still wanted to see if he could manage some kind of redemption.

    The movie ends in leaving us to answer that question ourselves.

    The crux of the movie is Bruno's character, or lack of it. He is no sociopath; he is not evil; his bland personality is as banal and unattractive as cold soup. He seems to not be dangerous, until faced with too much temptation to his greed. Yet he is difficult to hate. He is like that black sheep relative we all have and shake our heads about, so that we can whistle past the graveyard of our own inadequacies. He is what humanity can become when the spirit slumbers. He is society's unwitting sin eater.
    10Dengoku

    "L'Enfant" - The Child

    Earlier this evening, I was attending the premiere of "L'Enfant" in Belgian theaters.

    "L'Enfant" shows us a socio-drama, with a story located in the southern region of Belgium, in a city called Seraing, where most movies of the Dardenne brothers are situated.

    I will not go into any plot summaries, but let me make a comparison with other directors, so you might get a clue if you'd like to watch this movie or not. Socio-drama is a genre in film not only made in Belgium. Many great directors have made solid socio-drama's: Aki Kaurismaki, Ken Loach, Mike Leigh and many others.

    Where you can find a twist of humor in Kaurismaki's movies, you'll have a hard time finding it in "L'Enfant". A high level of realism avoids any dramatization of the struggle-for-life the protagonists experience. This makes it for the viewer not easier to swallow. The absence of a soundtrack even increases this effect.

    This movie has many strong points, and although I haven't seen many of the other films who were competing with "L'Enfant" at the Cannes film festival 2005, I think this film has fairly won the Palme d'Or because it scores very high on the essential aspects of film-making: acting, camera-work (see comment by Toon Creemers) and script (dialogues).

    I highly recommend this movie, but don't expect to be visually entertained the way we are used to by big budget films from Hollywood. Movies like these don't need a lot of dialogue, fancy one-liners or historical quotes - the picture says it all, in a simple but effective way.

    Enjoy,
    9tooncreemers

    Life at the bottom of society

    Although I have not seen all other Cannes' comp. films, I think this is a worthy winner of the Palm d'or. The film's scenery is gray Seraing, like the previous Dardenne films, and I think this is the first film in which the camera-work complements the scenery and story near perfectly. Scene's often contain only one or two shots, cutting right when everything has been said. Its one of the few films where I did not notice the camera (I'm a student cameraman), which should be the goal of every cameraman, at least in this style of film. The acting is very impressive (especially Jeremie Renier as Bruno), like previous Dardenne Films. The film seems the most accessible Dardenne so far, although it does not bore in simplicity (I saw it twice in one week, avant-premiere and sneak preview, and I liked the second time best).
    7Lou123

    Good one .... and above all GREAT ACTORS !!!!

    I can't say that I'm a fan of the previous Dardennes' movies... Saw Rosetta and "Le fils" and... well... didn't really go INTO them as I would have liked... probably because of the way (at the time) they were filmed ... sort of "dogma inspired" way of filming... following the neck/back of the characters, moving all the time... that makes me sea-sick... That's a detail that can make you laugh but something that disturbs me a lot from the story and that must not be used all the time in a film I think...

    To me, the film is first a love story between two young people, two kids in a way (more the guy than the girl) more than a social drama... a true one... but nevertheless standing in a social context that is obviously proposed from the first images, and that counts and is indissociable from the characters and what they live and are living in.

    What I felt is a real empathy for those two young lovers... Their love, their strength - each one trying to find a future, a new future... with their own means... Through money, through surviving, through a baby... through tears and the rare basic things of life they know or have been taught of...

    It's 1h35 you're watching a young man grow...

    My great enthusiasm for the film is also because of the actors. Jeremie Renier and Deborah Francois... They shine, they tremble and they're so true... I will also add the young boy who play Steve.. The film wouldn't be as touching without them... Wonderful belgian actors !!! BEST wishes to you all, you deserve it ! (Little moment of chauvinism, sorry LOL... anyway...

    This is a film I would recommend...
    7jpgonc

    A sad film about child-parents and lost youth

    L'Infant is extraordinary surprising. I never had seen a Belgian movie so I was very curious about this when I was in the theater.

    The script is about 2 young youths that aren't yet mature already carrying the burden of taking care of their own baby. Unemployed, without any good prospect of a real future, school droppers and not having reached maturity, they went on living just for the moment. The father is just a young, dull and irresponsible teenager that lives thru schemes and small petty crimes. The mother, looking as a 12 years old girl, thrives to support the child and don't discourage the way of living of her "husband", seen by her as fair and needed to aid their life.

    The film focuses also on the illegal and dark commerce of adoption and selling of children, which is by the way what the boy will do to gain a load of money...

    The movie then runs to decadence, regret, awareness of childish mistakes and bad options that, without surprise, would lead to an expected nightmare... jail.

    Great acting, fair dialog(Due to the content of the story) and a voyage to the sorrow for the misfortunes of these 2 child-parents.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jimmy is played by 40 different babies.
    • Quotes

      Bruno: Only fuckers work.

    • Connections
      Featured in Smagsdommerne: Episode #3.17 (2006)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Child?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 19, 2005 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Les Films du Fleuve (Belgium)
      • SCOPE Invest (Belgium)
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Child
    • Filming locations
      • Rue de la Banque, Seraing, Liège, Wallonia, Belgium(Sonia's apartment exteriors)
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Fleuve
      • Archipel 35
      • Radio Télévision Belge Francophone (RTBF)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €3,600,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $651,941
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $44,537
      • Mar 26, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,507,396
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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