Son, The (2002) France
Son, The Image Cover
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Director:Dardenne, Jean-Pierre, Dardenne, Luc, Gourmet, Olivier, Hassaïni, Nassim, Leroy, Kevin, Marinne, Morgan, Soupart, Isabella
Studio:Archipel 35
Writer:Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne
Rating:7.5 (4,144 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:717119875442
Awards:9 wins & 8 nominations
Genre:French films
IMDb:0291172
Duration:1:40:00
Aspect Ratio:1.66 : 1
Sound:Dolby Digital
Languages:French
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300001264
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Dardenne, Jean-Pierre, Dardenne, Luc, Gourmet, Olivier, Hassaïni, Nassim, Leroy, Kevin, Marinne, Morgan, Soupart, Isabella  ...  (Director)
Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne  ...  (Writer)
 
Olivier Gourmet  ...  Olivier
Morgan Marinne  ...  Francis
Isabella Soupart  ...  Magali
Nassim Hassaïni  ...  Omar
Kevin Leroy  ...  Raoul
Félicien Pitsaer  ...  Steve
Rémy Renaud  ...  Philippo
Annette Closset  ...  Training Center Director
Fabian Marnette  ...  Rino
Pierre Nisse  ...  Apprentice welder
Stephan Barbason  ...  Apprentice welder
David Manna  ...  Apprentice welder
Abdellah Amarjouf  ...  Apprentice welder
Jimmy Deloof  ...  Dany
Anne Gerard  ...  Dany's Mother
Comments: DFR 123

Summary: The brothers Dardenne craft lean, unfancy movies, full of ordinary people, with no special effects--but the emotional impact of their movies (which include the superb La Promesse and Rosetta) is devastating. In The Son, a carpentry teacher named Olivier (Olivier Gourmet) accepts a new student into his class after having first rejected him; it is soon revealed that this new boy, Francis, is responsible for the death of Olivier's son. But Olivier takes Francis under his wing--is Olivier planning on taking revenge? Is this a phenomenal act of compassion? Is he simply tormenting himself? The movie watches Olivier engage in his daily tasks without comment, yet every scene is almost unnervingly dense with emotion (it's no wonder that Gourmet won the Best Actor award at Cannes for this performance). The Son builds complex and potent feelings from utterly mundane moments. It's simply an astonishing feat of moviemaking. --Bret Fetzer