Film Description

   
LA GRAINE ET LE MULET (SECRET OF THE GRAIN)
Director: Abdel Kechiche
Country: France
Year: 2007
Language: French/Arabic/Russian with English subtitles
Runtime: 151 minutes
Rating: 14A
Principal Cast: Habib Boufares, Hafsia Herzi, Farida Benkhetache, Abdelhamid Aktouche, Bouraouïa Marzouk, Alice Houri, Leila D'Issernio,Abelkader Djeloulli
Trailer: View the trailer for this film

SCREENING TIMES
Saturday, November 15 4:30 PM Art Gallery of Windsor

Tickets: $10

The Secret of the Grain, winner of multiple film festival awards, is an intense tale about food, survival and the dance between men and women, all told through the experiences of one Franco-Tunisian family living in the French Mediterranean port city of Sete.

Slimane is a worn-out man of 60 who has worked at the local shipyard for 35 years. He's being forced out of his job; on a visit to his daughter's house, his son-in-law says that the shipyard owners no longer want French workers when they can hire immigrants for less money. That's a bitter little moment that underlines how Slimane is caught forever between two cultures, fitting into neither.

At that daughter's house, we get a glimpse of Slimane's complicated personal life. He has an ex-wife, Souad who complains about Slimane's late alimony payments. He and Souad have several adult children, and a couple of grandchildren, but Slimane lives with his girlfriend, Latifa , and her teenaged daughter, Rym. Rym regards Slimane as her father, and she feels very close to him. There is the expected amount of animosity between Slimane's two families. Souad, the ex-wife, prepares a huge family meal of fish couscous every weekend. The gathering of all her children for this meal is the centre of family activity.

Meanwhile, Slimane quietly decides to use his severance pay to open a restaurant on an old boat. The signature dish will be fish couscous -- made by Souad. Slimane must next handle the red tape of any commercial enterprise, as he tries to get loan arrangers, uninterested city planners and smug waterfront officials to see the beauty of his plan. His biggest helper in all this is Rym, who believes passionately in the restaurant. And in this chance to get ahead. They fix up the boat and decide to invite all the bureaucrats to a dinner, hoping to win their favour. For this, Slimane needs the help of everyone in his family, with Souad cooking the couscous and his children waiting tables. This upsets Slimane's girlfriend, but Rym convinces her to come to the dinner to show moral support.

The Secret of the Grain makes its point through the intimacy of family interaction. Extended scenes of family meals, with all the conversation, the politics and the minutiae of the meal included, draw you into the centre of the characters' lives. The film manages to be both an homage to women and a heartbreaking cultural commentary, and it's intense.

Liz Braun - Sun Media

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