2007


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Director : Karin Albou
Screenplay : Karin Albou
Director of Photography: Laurent Brunet
Cast :
Fanny Valette : Laura
Elsa Zylberstein : Mathilde
Bruno Todeschini: Ariel
Hedi Tillette de Clermont-Tonnerre : Djamel
Sonia Tahar : The mother
Michaël Cohen : Eric
Aurore Clément : Mikva’s wife
François Marthouret: The philosophy professor

Running time: 1h36min
Production: France, 2006
Rating: Not Rated
Distributor: Kino International
›› www.kino.com

  Awards :
SACD Screenwriting Award, Karin Albou, Cannes Film Festival (2005)
Best First Film, Karin Albou, French Syndicate of Cinema Critics (2006)
La Petite Jérusalem |
Little Jerusalem


Introduction by Ronnie Scharfman, Professor of French at Purchase College
Q&A with Ronnie Scharfman

 


 

Set in the Paris suburb of Sarcelles, “La Petite Jerusalem” is the nickname of a low-income, concrete housing neighbourhood with a substantial number of Jewish - and Jewish immigrant - residents. Among the thousands of men, women and children living there, one small household shelters a Tunisian-Jewish family of eight:, a French born, 18-year-old philosophy student, her older sister Mathilde, their Tunisian mother, Mathilde's husband Ariel and the couple's four young kids. Struggling to find her own voice inside a crowded house, Laura refuses Ariel's orthodox ethical codes and renounces her mother's superstitious background. Instead, the young woman embraces her studies in Kantian philosophy and decides to close her heart to strangers.
Although fully committed to her intellectual and philosophical life, Laura eventually runs into a classic disruption: an ex-journalist, Algerian-Muslim émigré named Djamel, who also works as a custodian in the local high school. Deeply attracted to his background and persona, Laura is forced to rethink her postulation that all romantic love is, in actuality, a harmful illusion.

 

This beautiful tale of two sisters living in Sarcelles, a low-income Parisian suburb of mostly new immigrants, presents the darker side of religion while offering a candid view of an Orthodox Jewish family struggling to stay together. (…)
It is in the juxtaposition of old rituals and modern life, of Orthodox teachings and the search for broader meanings, of a life of rules or one outside them, that Albou succeeds the most. Martha Barber, Miami Herald
Albou's chosen a touchy subject, which she treats sensitively. Her mature script is complemented by heartfelt turns by Fanny Valette as Laura and Elsa Zylberstein as Mathilde.
V.A. Musetto, New York Post

In her feature debut, Albou avoids didacticism, allowing the clash of ideas to play out unfettered. The grand ideas are effectively integrated into a drama that relies equally upon the head, the heart and the body for inspiration. Even when "La Petite Jérusalem" appears to be headed toward melodrama, Albou carefully reins it in, producing an ending that is satisfyingly open-minded.
Kevin Crust, Los Angeles Time