All the swagger and bravado that comes with the demand for retribution builds in quick narrative punches as Kassovitz moves to the film's final act, as Vinz gets ever closer to pulling the trigger. With Hubert and Saïd alongside him, serving as neither devil nor angel, the choice of knowing what should be done versus what must be done becomes very, very gray. A policeman's weapon is lost during one of the riots, and is recovered by Vinz, who vows eye-for-an-eye justice as he parades around like an edgy thug. Tensions are high as a local youth, wounded in a confrontation with police, clings to life, and it is apparent that if the boy dies, violence will most certainly erupt in even greater waves. There's Vinz (Vincent Cassel), the headstrong loose cannon who does Travis Bickle impressions in the mirror Hubert (Hubert Koundé), the quiet boxer ultimately drawn down a path he simply cannot ignore and Saïd (Saïd Taghmaoui) the joker of the group, a hyper dealmaker with all sorts of unsavory connections. In La Haine, it's a Jew, an African, and an Arab-three close friends bound by their immigrant status in France, all simmering with their own level of anger, frustration, and a streetwise brand of tough conflict resolution. Unlike a film set in the United States, for example, where the alienated may all be of one specific race or ethnicity, Kassovitz guts the volatile French class structure for the rest of the world to see, as he shows audiences an overcrowded-and most importantly-a multi-ethnic populace at the lower end of the social strata that band together amidst rundown public housing to rise against what is perceived as smothering, oppressive authority. Based loosely on a string of real life events, Kassovitz takes on what is sometimes called the "social time bomb" of the French banlieue, represented here by the seedy and dangerous outskirts of Paris where the edges of delinquency and order seem to continually collide. MPAA Rating: Not Rated for (violence, language)ĭVD ReviewThe title of this explosive 1995 film from writer/director Mathieu Kassovitz translates into English as "hate", and the story is set in France-though it could be just about anywhere-where the disenfranchised poor of the crowded housing projects are at constant, bloody odds with the local police, often with deadly results. Other Stars: Marc Duret, Philippe Nahon, Francois Levantal, Edouard Montoute, Eric Pujol, Benoît Magimel, Solo, Rywka Wajsbrot, Olga Abrego, Mathilde Vitry, Félicité Wouassi, Fatou Thioune, Mathieu Kassovitz, Abdel Ahmed Ghili FP Jones II/Original Female Character(s)įP teases Y/n at dinner with Jughead and the Cooper’s, will she be able to be a good girl and keep quiet.Stars: Vincent Cassel, Hubert Kounde, Said Taghmaoui.
#La haine gif archive
Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings.Iamgoku Fandoms: Marvel Cinematic Universe, Doctor Strange (2016), Iron Man (Movies), Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017)