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A Prophet

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A Prophet
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJacques Audiard
Screenplay by
Story byAbdel Raouf Dafri
Produced by
  • Lauranne Bourrachot
  • Martine Cassinelli
  • Pascal Caucheteux
  • Marco Cherqui
Starring
CinematographyStéphane Fontaine
Edited byJuliette Welfling
Music byAlexandre Desplat
Distributed byUGC Distribution
Release dates
  • 16 May 2009(2009-05-16)(Cannes)
  • 26 August 2009(2009-08-26)(France)
Running time
155 minutes[1]
Countries
  • France
  • Italy
Languages
  • French
  • Arabic
  • Corsican[a]
Budget$13 million[2]
Box office$17.9 million[2]

A Prophet(French:Un prophète) is a 2009 Frenchprisoncrime filmdirected byJacques Audiardwith a screenplay by Audiard,Thomas Bidegain,Abdel Raouf Dafriand Nicolas Peufaillit, from a story by Dafri. The film starsTahar Rahimin the title role as an imprisoned petty criminal of Algerian origins who rises in the prison hierarchy, becoming a mob associate anddrug traffickeras he is absorbed into theCorsicanmafia and then ingratiates himself into theMaghrebicrime syndicate.

Plot[edit]

Malik El Djebena, a 19-year-oldFrench youth of Algeriandescent, is sentenced to six years in prison for attacking police officers. Alone and illiterate upon his arrival, he falls under the sway ofCorsican mobsters,led by César Luciani, who enforces a brutal rule.

The prison is divided between two main factions: the Corsicans and the Maghrebis. Malik keeps to himself. When Luciani forces him to be the unwilling assassin of Reyeb, a Maghrebi witness in a trial, Malik gains the protection of the Corsicans despite his North African origin.

Malik serves as a low-level servant to the Corsicans, who treat him with disdain. All the while, he is haunted by visions of the murdered Reyeb.

When most of the Corsicans are transferred or released, Luciani is forced to give Malik more responsibility. Having secretly learnedCorsican,Malik acts as Luciani's eyes and ears in the prison. When Malik earns the privilege of day-long furloughs outside the prison, Luciani relies on him to conduct Luciani's criminal business outside.

Ryad, a Maghrebi friend, teaches Malik to read and write, and the two become close. Ryad teaches Malik about his own heritage, introducing him to two other Maghrebis, Tarik and Hassan, and increases his power within the prison.

Malik also becomes involved with a prison drug dealer, Jordi. When Ryad gains an early release due to testicular cancer, the three partners organize a drug-running enterprise to sellhashish.But when Ryad is kidnapped by the drug dealer Latif, Malik tracks down Latif's relative inside the prison. He kidnaps the relative's family and forces Latif's gang to release Ryad.

When Luciani discovers that Malik is using his day-releases for his own personal enterprise, he punishes him. Malik is sent to meet Brahim Lattrache in Marseille, another Maghrebi, who is involved in a deal between Luciani and the Lingherris, anItalian mafiagroup. Lattrache is bitter toward the Corsicans for the murder of Reyeb and holds Malik at gunpoint. When Malik spots a deer warning sign, he remembers a recent dream of deer running in the road. He tells his kidnappers that they are in danger of hitting wild animals, and they suddenly strike a deer. Lattrache is impressed by Malik, calling him aprophetand agreeing to conduct criminal business with him instead of Luciani, even though Malik admitted that he killed Reyeb.

Luciani believes there is a "mole" in his organization and decides to use Malik to assassinate Jacky Marcaggi, thedonof theCorsican mafia,for secretly dealing with the Lingherris. But Malik and Ryad have their own plan for Marcaggi: they kill his bodyguards, kidnap him, and inform him that it was Luciani who ordered the hit before abandoning him in the city.

Malik takes refuge at Ryad's house with his wife and young son. Ryad's cancer has returned; his decision to forego more chemotherapy leaves him just six months to live. He gets Malik to promise to take care of his family when he's gone.

Upon Malik's return to the prison, he is placed in solitary for returning late - putting him out of reach of Luciani's retribution - while Marcaggi uses his influence to wipe out much of Luciani's faction. Once back in general population, Malik joins the Maghrebi faction in the yard. When a now powerless Luciani tries to approach him, two Maghrebis intercept and beat him.

On the day of his release, Malik is met by Ryad's wife and son outside the prison. They walk off together, followed by a vehicle convoy carrying Malik's new associates.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Audiard stated that in making the film he intended to "creat[e] icons, images for people who don't have images in movies, like the Arabs in France,"[3]though he also had stated that the film "has nothing to do with his vision of society," and is a work of fiction.[4]

Audiard had been thinking about making a film set in prison after he had attended a screening of one of his films in one such institution and found himself shocked by the conditions there. The film's screenplay was submitted to them by a producer and reworked by Audiard and Thomas Bidegain.[4][5]

Audiard castNiels Arestrupas the Corsicancrime bossCésar Luciani, after featuring him in his previous film,The Beat that My Heart Skipped.He met Tahar Rahim, who plays Malik, when they shared an automobile ride from another film set. To ensure the authenticity of the prison experience, Audiard hired formerconvictsas advisors andextras.[5]

Reception[edit]

Critical response[edit]

A Prophetreceived widespread critical acclaim. Review aggregatorRotten Tomatoesreports that 96% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 165 reviews, with an average score of 8.3/10. Its critical consensus states that "Featuring an impressive star turn by newcomer Tahar Rahim,A Prophetis a French gangster film filled with arresting, immediate details. "[6]AtMetacritic,which assigns aweighted meanrating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received anaveragescore of 90, based on 31 reviews.[7]

DirectorJacques Audiard(center) and starsNiels ArestrupandTahar Rahimat the2009 Cannes Film Festival.

Reception of the film after its debut screening at2009 Cannes Film Festivalat thecompetitionwas good.A Prophetwas picked as the best film of the festival by a group of sixteen English-languagecriticsandbloggerspolled by the daily independent film news siteindieWIRE.[8]

Karin Badt atThe Huffington Postcalled it "refreshingly free".[4]Jonathan Romney ofScreen Internationalsaid that the film "works both as hard-edged, painstaking detailed social realism and as a compelling genre entertainment".[9]

Luke DaviesofThe Monthlycriticized some of the film's stylistic methodology and content, asserting that the prophetic themes could have been stretched out, but he celebrated the film's central character and his well-executed "improbable rise from invisibility to dominance", describing "what gives [the film] such dynamic energy is the seamlessness with which this transition unfolds". Davies described the film's main achievement as conveying a character as "someone we care about and gun for", who started life on screen as a blank slate.[10]

Awards[edit]

A Prophetwon theBAFTAforBest Film Not in the English Languageand nineCésars(including Best Film, Director, Actor and Supporting Actor), in addition to prizes at both the 2009Cannes Film Festivaland theLondon Film Festival.It was nominated for theBest Foreign Language Filmat the82nd Academy Awards.

It was thesubmission of Francefor the82nd Academy Awardsfor Best Foreign Film.[11]On 2 February 2010, when Academy Award nominations were announced,A Prophetreceived a nomination for Best Foreign Language film. The other four films in the category wereAjami,The Milk of SorrowandThe White Ribbon,and the eventual winner,El secreto de sus ojos.[12]

A Prophetwon theGrand Prixat the 2009 Cannes Film Festival.[13]At the 53rdLondon Film Festival,it won the Best Film Award.[14][15]It won thePrix Louis Delluc2009.[16]At the63rd British Academy Film Awards,it won a BAFTA for Best Film Not in the English Language. It was nominated for 13César Awards,tying it with three other films for the most nominations of any film in César history. It won 9 Césars at the ceremony, including Best Film, Best Director, Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor.[17]The film was nominated for theGrand Prixof theBelgian Syndicate of Cinema Critics.The film also won London's Favourite French Film award in 2010, as well as Best Foreign Film at the 13th annual British Independent Film Awards, which were held in London at the Old Billingsgate on 5 December 2010.[18]

A Prophetwas also nominated for Best International Film at the8th Irish Film and Television Awards,an award that went toThe Social Network.

In a 2016BBCpoll of 177 critics worldwide,A Prophetwas voted the 85th best film since 2000.[19]

In 2010Empiremagazine ranked it at number 63 in its "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" list.[20]

Box office[edit]

The film grossed $10,309,555 in France, and $2,087,720 in the United States and Canada.[2]

In the United Kingdom, the film grossed£1.3 million($2,025,000), making it the fourth highest-grossing foreign-language film of 2010 in the UK (belowMy Name Is Khan,The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,andThe Girl Who Played with Fire).[21]

Home media[edit]

In the United Kingdom, it was 2012's eighth most-watched foreign-language film on television with 190,000 viewers onChannel 4,and the year's most-watched French-language film.[22]

Remake[edit]

On 22 January 2016,Deadlinereported thatSam Raimiis in talks to directSony's remake of the film, withNeal H. Moritzand Tobe Jaffe producing, andDennis Lehanewriting the script.[23]On February 14, 2020, it was reported thatParamount Playersacquired the project, which becameRapman’sAmerican SonwithStephan JamesandRussell Crowe.[24][25][26]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Notes
  1. ^These are the languagesusedin the film, notnecessarilylanguages in which it is dubbed
  1. ^Un prophète - A Prophet.British Board of Film Classification.16 October 2009.Retrieved26 January2015.
  2. ^abcA Prophet (Un prophète).Box Office Mojo. 2010.Retrieved24 February2016.
  3. ^"Entretien avec Jacques Audiard, réalisateur d'Un prophète".Cinemotions(in French). Archived fromthe originalon 8 June 2010.Retrieved8 March2010.
  4. ^abcBadt, Karin (18 May 2009)."Cannes Favorite: Jacques Audiard's" The Prophet "".The Huffington Post.Retrieved21 August2009.
  5. ^abTuran, Kenneth(19 May 2009)."Jacques Audiard's 'A Prophet' has a buzz building".Los Angeles Times.Retrieved21 August2009.
  6. ^"A Prophet (Un prophete)".Rotten Tomatoes.Flixster.Retrieved19 October2020.
  7. ^"A Prophet Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More at Metacritic".Metacritic.CBS Interactive.Retrieved11 September2011.
  8. ^"Audiard's" Prophet "Hailed by Critics, Bloggers as Best of Cannes".IndieWire.27 May 2009.Retrieved21 August2009.
  9. ^Romney, Jonathan (25 May 2009)."A Prophet (Un Prophète)".Screen Daily.Retrieved21 August2009.
  10. ^Davies, Luke (February 2010)."Lost Boys: Jacques Audiard's A Prophet and John Hillcoat's The Road".The Monthly.
  11. ^"Un prophete retenu pour les oscars",Le Figaro,17 September 2009(in French)
  12. ^"Academy Award Nominations".CNN.com.5 March 2010.
  13. ^"Festival de Cannes: A Prophet".festival-cannes.com.Retrieved9 May2009.
  14. ^"Winner of Best Film Award: A Prophet".bfi.org.Archived fromthe originalon 31 October 2009.Retrieved30 October2009.
  15. ^"French film receives London award".bbc.co.uk.29 October 2009.Retrieved30 October2009.
  16. ^"Prix Louis Delluc:" Un prophète "sacré meilleur film 2009".Le Parisien(in French). 11 December 2009.Retrieved11 December2009.
  17. ^"2010 César Winners".César Awards.Archivedfrom the original on 12 April 2010.Retrieved25 March2010.
  18. ^"Winners announced: 13th Moët British Independent Film Awards".The Moët British Independent Film Awards. Archived fromthe originalon 9 December 2010.Retrieved5 December2010.
  19. ^"The 21st century's 100 greatest films".BBC.23 August 2016.Retrieved11 January2017.
  20. ^"The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema | 63. A Prophet".Empire.
  21. ^"Statistical Yearbook 11"(PDF).British Film Institute(BFI). 2011. p. 46.Retrieved21 April2022.
  22. ^"BFI Statistical Yearbook 2013"(PDF).British Film Institute(BFI). 2013. p. 150.Retrieved23 April2022.
  23. ^Fleming, Mike Jr. (22 January 2016)."Sam Raimi Circles 'A Prophet', Remake Of French Crime Thriller".Deadline Hollywood.Retrieved5 May2019.
  24. ^Kroll, Justin (14 February 2020)."Paramount Players Taps Rapman to Direct Film Based on Oscar-Nominated 'A Prophet' (EXCLUSIVE)".Variety.Retrieved4 January2021.
  25. ^Kroll, Justin (28 August 2020)."Stephan James To Star Opposite Russell Crowe In Paramount's 'American Son'".Deadline Hollywood.Retrieved4 January2021.
  26. ^"'A Prophet' Producers on Taking a Modern Spin With TV Reboot ".Variety. 24 March 2021.

External links[edit]