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La Petite Jérusalem

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La Petite Jérusalem

An orthodox Jewish teen living with her family in France attempts to balance her religious upbringing with her increasingly complex view of the outside world.

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Release : 2005
Rating : 6.5
Studio : Canal+,  Film Par Film,  Gloria Films, 
Crew : Director,  Writer, 
Cast : Fanny Valette Elsa Zylberstein Bruno Todeschini Hédi Tillette de Clermont-Tonnerre Michaël Cohen
Genre : Drama

Cast List

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Reviews

Scanialara
2018/08/30

You won't be disappointed!

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Actuakers
2018/08/30

One of my all time favorites.

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Bereamic
2018/08/30

Awesome Movie

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Roman Sampson
2018/08/30

One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.

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aFrenchparadox
2010/09/22

Laura is a pure young woman searching herself between her very orthodox religious background and Kantian philosophy. Then came the discovery of her own desire and sensuality. Though the man she loves cannot authorize himself to take distance with his own background, and hence Laura has to give up her romantic and high expectations, she goes on accepting her desires and taking distance with religion to find an allayed balance. On this path her sister helps her subtly (half conscious of it and above all, being non judgemental) and doing so finds her own way to live her sensuality within religion. A beautifully filmed initiatory path. Where even ugly Parisian suburbs are full of the light brought by Laura's purity. Where development of one member in a family brings development for everybody, because human beings live in network and there is no way your own inner changes have no impact on, at the very least, your relatives.

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ummfatima02
2006/10/22

I thought the movie was well done from the beginning. We center on Laura, from the opening scene breaking from the rest of the crowd to pray on her own beside the river. This could be a slight hint at the direction her faith might be taking. Separate, deep concentration, solitary. etc.. WE learn that she has decided to cast away her premonitions of sensual desires as controlling and things best kept at bay. Until we are introduced to the calm and mysterious Djamel. A scene in the locker room. when he covers her slightly bare arm, was as sensual as any sex scene any movie could produce. We see that his intentions are genuine and not harmful. Their relationship is dwindled when reality is thrown in the mix. Laura cannot deny her heritage and religion, no matter how she rebels, and Djamel cannot escape his past which is written all over him. Mathilde's comes back to haunt Laura..."We are all alone." No matter what we may believe to be truth, in the end we are all alone in the results of our decisions.

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D A
2006/09/10

Yes, this movie offers a rare view into the lives of two Jewish sisters living with their family in France, the problem is there is not a whole lot of conviction behind the themes, the whole movie just kind of floats by on its own accord, never really making those connections it wishes to with the main characters. Laura, played by the sensual Fanny Valette does do a good job with her various inner struggles, and paints a respectable, and hardly viewed female archetype, in her character breaking with the traditions of family to seek out her own unique philosophies. Although potentially inspiring to the new generations of strict fundamentalist families, there is nothing depicted in this subtle religious rebellion that was not gone over ten fold with other countries feminist and/or religious fare. The resulting transformations of these two sisters seems rote in comparison, and despite the inclusion of several sex scenes, becomes predictable, tedious, and uninvolved all too quickly. Writer/Director Karin Albou does what she can for her part to retain some authenticity and command of her film but ultimately ends up loosing the viewer do to the underdeveloped script and flawed direction.

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Red-125
2005/11/19

La Petite Jérusalem (2005), written and directed by Karin Albou, was shown at the Rochester High Falls Film Festival as "Little Jerusalem." The title refers to the section of suburban Paris that is inhabited by first-generation Jewish immigrants--most of them from North Africa.The Muslim-Hebrew conflict has apparently been transported to France, where each group is suspicious of--and hostile towards--the other.Two Jewish sisters are trapped in conflicts. The older, Mathilde (Elsa Zylberstein), is a wife and mother residing in a modern, developed country, but still living under marital rules and customs brought from her native Tunisia. She realizes that there are problems in her marriage, but doesn't know where to turn for help. Seeking formal therapy would be out of the question. Instead, she receives counseling from the attendant at the mikva--the ritual bath. (This pivotal supporting role is portrayed beautifully by Aurore Clément. Another brilliant supporting actor is Sonia Tahar, who plays the girls' mother.)The part of the younger sister, Laura, is played by Fanny Valette. Laura is a brilliant philosophy student who works at night as a cleaner at a school. She falls in love with a young co-worker from the Muslim community, with predictably problematic results.This film could not be more timely--as I write this review, the immigrant communities in France (primarily Muslim), have risen in revolt against what they perceive as discrimination and prejudice against them within French society. Being an immigrant can never be easy. What makes it so hard is portrayed very well in this movie.La Petite Jérusalem offers a glimpse of a world most of us will never know. The district isn't very attractive, and it's certainly off the beaten path for tourists. The people who live in Petite Jérusalem have to cope as best they can. This film shows how they go about this precarious balancing act. It's a wonderful movie, and is definitely worth seeking out. (In French, Arabic, and Hebrew, with English subtitles.)

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