A Prophet: Free Man in Prison
Nice work, people! After a slow start, OTJ’s box-office has picked up and it starts its second week in cinemas—thanks to moviegoers like yourselves who spread the word online and in the social media. If you run into Erik Matti, tell him to buy you a drink.
In his notes on OTJ, Matti cited the filmmakers he learned from: To, Ka-Fai, Melville, the Coen Brothers and Audiard. (And Bilibid Boys hihi. Hoy, what about Wong Kar-Wai.) Which reminded us of one of our favorite movies, Un Prophete by Jacques Audiard. It is set in a prison, and its protagonist gets day passes and occasionally kills people, but it is entirely different in tone, mood, theme, philosophy and acting styles. Here is our review of A Prophet, published in 2010.
There are movies you admire for their vision, technique, the way they tell the truth about the times we live in. You don’t necessarily love them, but they make great subjects for dinnertime discussion or movie reviews. Many arthouse films belong in this category.
There are movies you love, for reasons you can’t really go into, because love is like that. These are the movies you refer to during personal crises, when you’re trying to make sense of what’s happening. You can see the flaws of these movies but you love them anyway, probably because they Are flawed.
(Of course there are movies you hate for some reason, or none, and these are still preferable to the movies that make no impression on you whatsoever. Trust me, loathing is better than nothing.)
Then there are the movies you admire AND love, and this is a small category. You feel compelled to make your friends see them. You need to defend them from nitpickers. In extreme cases you start collaring random strangers and yelling, “You have to see this movie!”
In my case one of those movies is a French crime drama called The Beat That My Heart Skipped. It was directed by Jacques Audiard, whom I’d never heard of. In April I saw Audiard’s latest movie, A Prophet, on a long flight. Since then I’ve seen it five times.
So this is me collaring you to see A Prophet. Clearly this is not a proper movie review.
A Prophet is the story of Malik El Djebena, a 19-year-old French Algerian orphan sentenced to six years in jail for assaulting a cop. The film opens on his first day in prison: he has the look of someone who expects to be struck at any second. He’s illiterate, he has no friends in or out of prison, he’s pretty; we think, “The boy is dead meat.” Happily, we are wrong.
Propelled by an amazing performance by Tahar Rahim, steered with great assurance by Jacques Audiard, and infused with the cockiness and pure cinematic joy of the early Scorsese, A Prophet is a film that constantly surprises.
We are prepared to pity Malik, and he seems doomed to be a victim. When he ventures out into the yard, he is divested of his sneakers and beaten. Reyeb, a recently-arrived prisoner, offers him hash for sex, then the Corsican mafia inside the jail makes him an offer he can’t refuse: Kill Reyeb, or we’ll kill you. In a squirm-inducing scene, Malik practises hiding the murder weapon—a razor blade—in his cheek; before long the sink is streaked with blood.
Oddly enough Reyeb turns out to be the best friend he’s ever had. In their brief conversation Reyeb tells him he can learn to read in prison. “The point is to leave here smarter than when you came in,” he says.
Think of the killing as an inverted version of Meursault shooting an Arab in Camus’ The Stranger: Malik has no choice, and he loves his life, such as it is, much more than Meursault did. Malik is placed under the protection of the Corsican boss Cesar Luciani; he runs errands and makes the coffee, enduring the Corsicans’ taunts of “dirty Arab”. The Muslims in the prison regard him as the Corsicans’ dog; he doesn’t belong anywhere.
It’s around this time that our little would-be victim reveals that he has teeth—a sharp intelligence, a capacity to spot and play the angles. While the Corsicans are pushing him around, he’s learning their language. When the Sarkozy policy repatriating political prisoners takes effect, Luciani finds himself almost alone and Malik becomes his right hand. As in The Beat That My Heart Skipped, the central relationship is between a young man and his brutal father figure; in both movies the “father” is played with lordly menace by Niels Arestrup. What begins as a powerless young man’s fight for survival becomes a struggle to rule.
Audiard has made a prison movie about freedom—not the loss, but the finding of it. Malik, tabula rasa, a man with no family, possessions, or history, is the freest man in prison. There is literally nothing to hold him back: he takes his freedom and uses it as a weapon. While he’s sweeping floors and doing chores for Luciani, he’s building his own business network. Slowly he gains the acceptance of the Muslim community in prison; he even acquires a family outside the walls. His friendship with Ryad, the former inmate who taught him to read, and with Ryad’s wife and son, gives him the emotional security he never had.
When Luciani arranges for him to take 12-hour leaves, he discovers that the outside world operates on the same principles as prison. Prison turns out to be great training for CEOs. The first time Malik takes an airplane, he goes through an airport security check. As the guard runs the metal detector under his outstretched arms, Malik opens his mouth and sticks out his tongue. It’s hilarious and lovely.
A Prophet contains set pieces so exciting they lift you off your seat—during one particularly doomed assignment, Malik demonstrates that he has the biggest cojones in Paris. But there’s more: this is a gangster thriller with a transcendental streak. The nitty-gritty of “real” time seamlessly coexists with Malik’s own dream time.
Malik has dreams that may be construed as visions. “What are you, a prophet?” a ganglord asks. Maybe he is. Sitting in solitary confinement, staring up at the ceiling, our boy Malik smiles. He’s looking at the future, and he created it.
September 3rd, 2013 at 22:52
Have you heard about Chan-wook Park and his films?I just discovered him a month ago and I’m now a fan. He’s up there with Wong-Kar Wai but they have different styles. Park is a bit more on the twisted/heavy side. I strongly recommend Old Boy. Better yet, watch his vengeance trilogy. If all things Korean are like him, then we would be K-Pop free.
September 3rd, 2013 at 23:04
cjspotless: Yes, we saw Sympathy for Lady Vengeance at the Far East filmfest in Italy in 2006. No, we have no problem with K-Pop. We like how it has appropriated western pop and sold it back to the west.
September 4th, 2013 at 03:45
Tahar Rahim – Habibi!
September 4th, 2013 at 11:40
“So this is me collaring you to see A Prophet. Clearly this is not a proper movie review.”
Roger Ebert on movie reviews, from Life Itself: “If it isn’t subjective, there’s something false about it.”
September 5th, 2013 at 11:48
“The plan is for Malik to offer the guy a blowjob, then suddenly stand up and cut the guy’s throat with a razor blade.”
Napakahusay ng nakaisip nito.
Hindi pa ako nakakapanood ng mga French crime thrillers. Susubukan ko na.