The Denver Post

Paris projects ready to ignite in “Les Miserables”

- By Jake Coyle

★★★☆ Rated R. In French with English subtitles. 104 minutes.

Ladj Ly’s muscular police procedural “Les Miserables” is much leaner than Victor Hugo’s sprawling novel and shares little with it besides a suburban Paris setting. But they’re united in their sympathy for — and belief in the formidable power of — the underclass.

“Les Miserables,” France’s Oscar submission and the jury prize winner at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, is a visceral, street-wise portrait of those who abuse power, and those who demand it, in the working-class Paris banlieue of Montfermei­l. The film is set specifical­ly around the housing projects known as Les Bosquets, ground zero in the Paris riots of 2005. That explosion of violence was, in part, about French identity. Most of the rioters were poor second- or third-generation immigrants, largely North African Arabs, who had long been marginaliz­ed.

Ly, the son of a garbage collector from Mali, grew up in the area, and when the unrest erupted, he was there to document it. “Les Miserables” is his fictionfil­m debut, and it pulses with the fire and feeling of a filmmaker dramatizin­g something he knows intimately.

Ly fills his film with a spectrum of characters from across the projects: the kids who ride garbage can covers down cement like sleds, including the young Issa (Issa Perica); the Muslim Brotherhoo­d members, including the kebab shop owner Salah (Almamy Kanouté); a gang of gypsy circus workers, furious when their lion cub is stolen by Issa; a local community leader known as “The Mayor” (Steve Tientcheu).

But the film’s central characters are a trio of police officers in the Street Crimes Unit who cruise through the neighborho­od. New to the team is Stephane (Damien Bonnard), a more dutiful cop whose attention to the law, and the rights of citizens, isn’t shared by the harassing, proudly racist motormouth Chris (Alexis Manenti, who cowrote the film with Ly and Giordano Gederlini). His faithful, if slightly skeptical black partner is Gwada (Djebril Zonga).

On his first day, the police commission­er (Jeanne Balibar) tells Stephane: “No solidarity, no team.”

The procedural set up, taking place across one eventful day, is familiar. “Les Miserables,” in which the SCU’s tactics come to a head with the impoverish­ed community evokes “Training Day” or “Do the Right Thing” as much as it does Hugo.

“Les Miserables” is a powder keg, always at risk of detonating. We have the sense that the Bosquets’ simmering flames of disquiet and injustice are always a matchstick away from blazing.

Tensions do finally spill over, with Ly commanding­ly tracking the action from the ground and, in frequent drone shots, from above. The conclusion tips the movie into an inferno that may, by letting the tensions out, dilute the film’s force. Ly turns his movie’s focus toward the young boys of the Bosquets, and the dim future their country is fixing for them.

 ?? Amazon Studios ?? A scene from “Les Miserables.”
Amazon Studios A scene from “Les Miserables.”

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