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La Vie De Jesus on DVD (1997)

La Vie De Jesus cover art
Average rating: 58%
47312615201534
3.0
from 60 members
 
Starring: David Douche, Marjorie Cottreel
Director: Bruno Dumont
Studio: EUREKA ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 96 mins
Certificate: 18
Genres: Drama, World Cinema
Languages: French
Released: 21/07/2008

Brief synopsis of La Vie De Jesus

Bruno Dumont makes his feature film debut with LIFE OF JESUS, a powerful, tense drama that incorporates several different styles to create a distinctly new vision. The story follows Freddy (David Douche), an uneducated 20-year-old epileptic who lives in a small town in Northern France with his mother. His true sources of joy are spending time with his girlfriend Marie (Marjorie Cottreel) and riding his motorcycle with his gang of chronically unemployed friends. When Kader (Kader Chaatouf), a handsome Arabian stranger, moves to town and tries to seduce Marie, she rejects his advances, convinced of what will happen if Freddy finds out. When Freddy does, he and his friends take out their jealousy in a way that even Marie could not have projected.
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Dumont, working with nonprofessional actors, much like French master Robert Bresson, strikingly blends static camera work with exhilarating moving shots of Freddy on his motorcycle, which creates a subconscious tension that finally erupts by the film's climax. Rather than being merely a subtle thriller, however, LIFE OF JESUS also works as a powerful social commentary--as well as a striking religious metaphor--firmly establishing Dumont as a force to be reckoned with in modern world cinema.

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Sight and Sound

...Dumont reveals himself as an uncompromising new talent...

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Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsAbsolutely terrific

Savage from London, England [Highly rated reviewer] , 10/11/2008

Using a non-professional cast, and very little narrative interference, debut director Bruno Dumont (whose subsequent career has struggled badly to live up to this start) paints a deflating picture of life in a boring small Flanders town for a gang who like to ride their motor-scooters and do up a clapped-out old car, but not much else. If there's work available, they don't want it; they join in with the local marching band (a very odd touch) in a desultory kind of way; and they abuse the young Arab lad who has designs on the girlfriend of one of them. Another of their friends dies of AIDS in the hospital, and it's clear that, while Jesus might have come back as the son of God, none of these kids are going to be remembered for anything once they've gone.

Some strong sex scenes - albeit amongst the least erotic ever shot - and some ultraviolence at the end, but Dumont is at least as interested in the bleak poetry he finds in his story. It's a bit like Robert Bresson without the transcendence, and, the highest compliment I can pay it, every bit as good.

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