Top

film

Stories

 

Jacques Audiard's False Prophet

No visionary he, the 'French Scorsese' arrives stateside with his '70s-style gangster epic

Agreeing at the insistence of a Corsican mob boss to suck and then slash a fellow inmate, newly jailed Malik El Djebena (Tahar Rahim)—poor, illiterate, a "dirty Arab" in the prison's racist pecking order—gets what's coming to him, but in a good way. Indeed, crime pays in A Prophet, the Gallic gangster movie whose armed assault of film fests, awards shows, and critics' polls has made it the most widely valued French underworld thriller since the '60s reign of tough-guy auteur Jean-Pierre Melville.

Tough cell: Rahim
Roger Arpajou/Sony Pictures Classics
Tough cell: Rahim

Details

A Prophet
Directed by Jacques Audiard
Sony Pictures Classics
Opens February 26

Related Content

More About

Does director Jacques Audiard deserve his new status as a made man? Set mostly in prison and named for a wiseguy in the making, A Prophet affects an almost spiritual transcendence, no matter what nasty service Audiard's self-made hero has to perform in and out of the clink. As per modern gangster-flick formula, the appeal of upward mobility—the thug's, if not the filmmaker's—trumps any and all ethical considerations, particularly in this economy.

Sold to the global arthouse market as the "French Scorsese," Audiard does know his genre. A Prophet, the director has said, is the "anti-Scarface." Thus jittery El Djebena carves up a snitch in the first reel and goes out stylishly in the last. In between, he's incrementally rewarded by César Luciani (Niels Arestrup)—the French jailhouse Don Vito Corleone, you could say (complete with as much Brando-esque gravitas as can be stuffed into XL sweatpants). El Djebena matures before our eyes, learning the underworld ropes in the increasingly pokerfaced manner of Vito's kid Michael. Whatever suspense A Prophet musters in its rather protracted running time involves our predictable unease about how far the student may be willing to go for—or against—his master.

Audiard—son of a famous director, devoted pupil of wizened kingpins from Coppola to Mann—is engaged in a filial relationship of his own here. How far is he willing to go for his masters? On one hand, A Prophet has everything: hash deals gone bad, a wicked shootout in close quarters, a thug called "the Egyptian," an inmate's cancerous testicles, ultimate Redemption. On the other, the film is deficient in form and content—not naturalistic so much as neutered, less revisionist than rote. Audiard may have had the stones to tweak Jim Toback's Fingers in '05 (with the racy The Beat That My Heart Skipped), but here, his approach to cinematic '70s-isms is slavish—and downright corny. Visited by the ghost of his first victim (a friendly ghost, as it happens), El Djebena gets time off for "good" behavior, his day-tripping by train and plane set to Alexandre Desplat's soaring score. This jailbird can fly!

A Prophet gets a much-needed hint of ambiguity in the lead turn by Rahim, an earthy-looking non-pro who sometimes seems to be channeling Enrique Irazoqui's lumpen prole Christ from The Gospel According to St. Matthew. The killer prophet has a premonition or two, rises to the tune of Nas's hip-hop riff on "Mannish Boy," gets the chance to whack a boss on the outside, starts calling shots of his own, and, after serving years for a crime he may or may not have committed, remains a cipher. (Symbolism alert: The mystery man is shown struggling to comprehend the word "canard.")

Equal parts French Caucasian and Arab, El Djebena waffles between the prison's Corsican and Muslim tribes until two and a half hours are up and Audiard has to settle on a message. Is A Prophet, as argued elsewhere, a Sarkozyist parable of the Arab Frenchman's new juice? Probably, but that sure isn't the reason why the movie has collected hyperbolic acclaim from here to Hollywood. Audiard's shrewdly determined redemption conceit requires his multi-ethnic gang war to resolve into some marketably "universal" truths, chiefly a mannish boy's right to accumulate and propagate. As Tony Montana would say, for the price of a movie ticket, the world is yours.

 
  • Manish Golder 03/18/2011 6:20:00 AM

    I agree with simon. And I completely disagree with the presence of so-called 'message' all around. prophet revels in not being preachy - and I really have not seen a movie further removed from vito/michael corleone fable. The critic seems a tad confused here.

  • a 06/14/2010 10:59:00 AM

    Metacritic has this listed as a positive review, but I think it's a pan? No idea what the fuck this review is arguing, but I'm mad enough to comment so I guess you win!

  • Bobby D 05/10/2010 6:02:00 PM

    Having just seen the film and reading the few negative reviews on RottonTomatoes, I have to say that I found the movie very contrived and at times very hokey and forced... The lead actor is very photogenic and he and other actors do a very good job and overall the movie seems like they had a very professional crew to do the sound and lighting... Other than a interesting window into French prison life (basically the bread was the most revealing thing), a few good violence sequences, and a few bullying and sad sequences...I was really left wondering what the point was.

  • James 04/10/2010 9:32:00 AM

    Yes, the soaring score when Malik gets out of jail on a day pass is cheesy. However, the rest of this review sounds a lot like a critic hellbent on being contrarian by bashing a justifiably celebrated movie. The film is more neutered that naturalistic? rote not revisionist? and slavish in its apporach to 70isms? Please explain. No? So you mean you're just going to level these accusations and leave it at that? The reason for all that is...a single corny scene in which the score soars when Malike gets out on a day pass? Really, this is the best you can do? Hmmm. What a lazy review, I can't believe this guy has a job.

  • simon 03/29/2010 12:48:00 PM

    There's nothing corny about a new crime classic. What's with the underhanded diss Nelson? This is powerful filmmaking that needs to be applauded...

  • jamie plaisance 03/25/2010 8:53:00 PM

    i meant "mr. nelson"......oops, i'm not very smart.

  • jamie plaisance 03/25/2010 8:52:00 PM

    mr. thomas--- we get it, you're intelligent. you're smarter than anyone who enjoys this film. but you're not as happy. this is a very good film (especially compared to most of the stuff out there). it's people like you who made conan o'brien sign off the tonight show by basically telling america to "stop being cynical."

  • cathy thomas 03/15/2010 11:51:00 PM

    Rob, You're a frickin moron. You can't write a coherent sentence, and you're so full of yourself with every stupid dismissive word, how in the world does anyone hire a fraud as obvious as yourself. You wouldn't know a good film from a bad film if it up and bitch slapped you in the face (I'd actually love that privilege). When there are critics out there that really deserve ink and I see such a blatant idiot like yourself getting space, I wanna puke. Hang in there, Rob, mediocrity pays (what $50 bucks a review?), and you're the king of it. I never take the time out to diss on anyone, but it's high time someone called you out on your crap. Catie Thomas

  • dirk 03/15/2010 4:24:00 PM

    If you watch a two and a half hour film that is completely suffused with its message without seeing it, maybe you should look again.

  • tony 03/11/2010 8:13:00 PM

    This "review" is indicative of the major deterioration of New York's VILLAGE VOICE. A whacked-out righteousness trumps any pretense of an aesthetic evaluation.

  • Eva B. 03/03/2010 12:54:00 PM

    It's obvious that Rob Nelson is more interested in looking like a peacock by being a contrarian than reviewing honestly a movie. His intellectual dishonesty makes him full of you-know-what...

  • troy 03/03/2010 1:47:00 AM

    a rare miss in Voice film reviews. All name-droppy style ,no substance--expect a major SPOILER...gee thanks...read film review 101 again

  • deam 02/26/2010 10:08:00 PM

    What is this? a review, or what would you call this piece of John Simon snark. I can't tell if it's the movie or the director you don't like. I wonder when universally, this picture has been praised so highly, you, and apparently you alone, are so negative. This isn't criticism, it's assassination by snobbism. Maybe you just need to get laid.

  • Ser 02/24/2010 11:23:00 AM

    What a meaningless article. Obsessed with the movie's accolades and acclaim, but with preciously little to say about the movie itself. Lazy.

 

Find A Film

for free stuff, film info & more!

Find A Coupon

Popular Coupons

Box Office

  1. Chronicle (2012/ I), 22.0 mil, 22.0 mil
  2. The Woman in Black, 20.9 mil, 20.9 mil
  3. The Grey, 9.3 mil, 34.6 mil
  4. Big Miracle, 7.8 mil, 7.8 mil
  5. Underworld: Awakening, 5.5 mil, 54.2 mil
  6. One for the Money, 5.2 mil, 19.6 mil
  7. Red Tails, 4.7 mil, 41.1 mil
  8. The Descendants, 4.6 mil, 65.5 mil
  9. Man on a Ledge, 4.4 mil, 14.6 mil
  10. Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, 3.8 mil, 26.7 mil
Movie Title, Weekly Earnings, Total Earnings

Trailers

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy