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Synopsis

Robert Guédiguian, chronicler of the working class in Marseilles, made a panoramic, committed and gripping sketch of life in the port. A mother is willing to do anything to save her daughter who is addicted to heroin.

Robert Guédiguian can rightly be described as the chroniqueur of his home city of Marseilles. That city is an apparently inexhaustible source for his films, in which the situation of the working classes is studied in a classic way. The ironically titled La ville est tranquille opens with a panoramic picture of the city: the camera slowly turns 360 degrees and shows the centre, the quays, the sea and the working-class districts nestled up against the hills. This is exemplary for the film’s ambition, inhabited as it is by a large number of characters who eventually come together in what is now known as an Altmanesque way. The Madonna of Sorrows is Michèle, a 40 year-old woman who earns her money at the fish auction. Her husband is sitting at home, chronically ill and bitter, her daughter has a baby and a serious drug problem that will lead to her a demise. The other main character, the bachelor Paul, has used his lay-off money to buy a taxi. He is the one who will try take to help Michèle. Guédiguian made his film a gripping ode to his city. He paints with a firm hand a picture of ultra-right politics, machinations, drug dealing, either hautaine or politically correct haute bourgeois, the apparently fixed place given to ‘minorities’, in other words, la vie au bord de la mer. –IFFR

Director

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Robert Guédiguian

Robert Jules Guédiguian (born 3 December 1953 in Marseille) is a French film director, actor, screenwriter and producer. Most of his films star Ariane Ascaride and Jean-Pierre Darroussin.

Guédiguian is the son of a German mother and an Armenian father. He evokes his paternal roots in his 2006 film Le Voyage en Armenie. He has a working class background – his father a worker on the Marseille docks. He early became concerned with political questions and for a while was involved with the French Communist Party. In 2008 he joined the Left Party.

Like Marcel Pagnol and René Allio before him, he anchors his films in social reality, flirting with militancy. His films are strongly marked by the local and regional environment of the city of Marseille, and in particular L’Estaque, (north-west Marseille), for example in Marius et Jeannette. His latest film The Snows of Kilimanjaro premiered in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival. —Wikipedia 

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Bleak and Beautiful

By Agustin​a on May 6, 2010

I deeply admire Guédiguian’s subject matter which usually involves social reality and a strong critique of capitalism.

Although bleak, “La Ville est Tranquille” is a masterpiece, powerful, moving…  read review

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