IMDb RATING
7.5/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Victims of violent crime and perpetrators meet up in a restorative justice group in order to have a dialogue and heal from their trauma.Victims of violent crime and perpetrators meet up in a restorative justice group in order to have a dialogue and heal from their trauma.Victims of violent crime and perpetrators meet up in a restorative justice group in order to have a dialogue and heal from their trauma.
- Awards
- 1 win & 9 nominations total
Suliane Brahim
- Fanny
- (as Suliane Brahim de la Comédie Française)
Denis Podalydès
- Paul
- (as Denis Podalydès de la Comédie Française)
Featured reviews
Je verrai toujours vos visages is part of a recent wave of French cinema that sheds light on the public institutions' efforts to heal woes in society and help the vulnerable. Basically, the "Fraternité" in the French Republic motto "Liberté - Egalité - Fraternité."
So, if you have enjoyed watching Hors Normes, or Pupille, this movie should be a positive experience for you.
You may have read the plot. You may be concerned that the movie is too emotionally heavy. That life is already painful and you are not in the mood for a movie tackling an issue so serious. Rest assured: the movie is not all suffering. Go for it. You will learn something or two, including the value of compassion.
One element of disappointment for me is the packaging of the stories together into a movie. The movie switches between two different stories, and I was personally not convinced that there is any real synergy between them. It feels like each story was not enough for one movie, so they glued the two together. Or that the creators were keen on showing different missions undertaken by the Restorative Justice system. Likewise, the movie delves randomly and somewhat superficially at the personal lives of the public agents. We get sneak peaks every now and then that we could have done without. Too much and at the same time not enough.
In short, good story but the salt and pepper of the movie could have been better seasoned.
So, if you have enjoyed watching Hors Normes, or Pupille, this movie should be a positive experience for you.
You may have read the plot. You may be concerned that the movie is too emotionally heavy. That life is already painful and you are not in the mood for a movie tackling an issue so serious. Rest assured: the movie is not all suffering. Go for it. You will learn something or two, including the value of compassion.
One element of disappointment for me is the packaging of the stories together into a movie. The movie switches between two different stories, and I was personally not convinced that there is any real synergy between them. It feels like each story was not enough for one movie, so they glued the two together. Or that the creators were keen on showing different missions undertaken by the Restorative Justice system. Likewise, the movie delves randomly and somewhat superficially at the personal lives of the public agents. We get sneak peaks every now and then that we could have done without. Too much and at the same time not enough.
In short, good story but the salt and pepper of the movie could have been better seasoned.
A major problem with the criminal justice systems in assorted countries - including the United States - is that they emphasize punishment over rehabilitation; one might say that these are criminal injustice systems. I don't know how it works in France, but Jeanne Herry's "Je verrai toujours vos visages" ("All Your Faces" in English) offers a possibility: restorative justice. This regimen features discussions between inmates and their victims.
It's not always a smooth process, as there's plenty of tension between people (especially due to the variety of races). Nonetheless, there's the chance of forgiveness and increased understanding of the causes of anything defined as crime. I wouldn't call it a masterpiece, but it's worth seeing. I don't know if it's available on any streaming service, so you might have to check a neighborhood video store.
The cast includes Miou-Miou and Adèle Exarchopoulos (who more recently voiced Ennui in "Inside Out 2").
It's not always a smooth process, as there's plenty of tension between people (especially due to the variety of races). Nonetheless, there's the chance of forgiveness and increased understanding of the causes of anything defined as crime. I wouldn't call it a masterpiece, but it's worth seeing. I don't know if it's available on any streaming service, so you might have to check a neighborhood video store.
The cast includes Miou-Miou and Adèle Exarchopoulos (who more recently voiced Ennui in "Inside Out 2").
I have a Bachelors in Arts in Criminology. And a double in Psychology. Not many people know this about me, because, frankly, I am embarrassed because I do not use it at all in my life. I feel like I wasted my 4 years in college and have basically no career; doing basically nothing; what could have been done with a high school diploma.
But I digress.
I only confessed it now to give some validity to my next statement, which is that this restorative program between offenders and victims needs to be a real thing. And not only in France. World wide. My studies and own personal research tells me that this is real. It works more often than it does not- maybe not in the ways people want it to, but it is real progress. Kudos to the filmmakers for such an insightful premise, and to the actors and actresses for some damn fine performances all around. Bravo!
But I digress.
I only confessed it now to give some validity to my next statement, which is that this restorative program between offenders and victims needs to be a real thing. And not only in France. World wide. My studies and own personal research tells me that this is real. It works more often than it does not- maybe not in the ways people want it to, but it is real progress. Kudos to the filmmakers for such an insightful premise, and to the actors and actresses for some damn fine performances all around. Bravo!
10kosmasp
No pun intended - why do people do the things they do? Don't they realize their actions have consequences? Quite big ones to the people they are doing them to ... too. This pits victims and perpetrators together in a room ... and it can be explosive, but mostly informative ... what happens, how self reflective can they be and become? You'll have to watch to find out.
The acting is amazing to say the least. Considering that most of the movie plays in one room, the dynamic, the script and the dialog has to work ... and it does. You also have a family side story - with the same topic of sorts. But equally heavy ... if not heavier because emotions are way bigger with this one.
There are outbursts ... I did expect more, but it is ok, it is more about substance than about effect! And it works ... it may not be a solution for everyone - but it may be worth doing a program like that ... maybe it already exists. Really good movie ... with a somewhat hopeful message.
The acting is amazing to say the least. Considering that most of the movie plays in one room, the dynamic, the script and the dialog has to work ... and it does. You also have a family side story - with the same topic of sorts. But equally heavy ... if not heavier because emotions are way bigger with this one.
There are outbursts ... I did expect more, but it is ok, it is more about substance than about effect! And it works ... it may not be a solution for everyone - but it may be worth doing a program like that ... maybe it already exists. Really good movie ... with a somewhat hopeful message.
The topic is not the same, but the overall atmosphere and more or less scheme, kind of drama, reminded me TWELVE ANGRY MEN, a story which takes mostly place in one room - whithout being a trial - involving people, men and woman, victims and perpetrators, facing each other, and trying to talk, explaining, showing, confessing what they felt....it has never been done before and that makes it even more powerful, astounding. It is purely stunning. Terrific dialogues. However, I can understand that some audiences may be annoyed , because it is naive, unrealistic. That's a matter of taste, point of view, that depends of which angle you watch it. Something is wrong in the story lines, when a young hoodlums speaks of a home jacking where he and his pals took credit cards with the secret code to retrieve money from the cash machines. In France, with a credit card - stolen or not - you can retrieve ONLY 400 euros each week. So when this hoodlum says that one of his pals bought a new motorcycle with his share of the loot, that's not possible.... The hoodlums could only at best retrieve 400 euros. Because a few hours after the homejacking, the victimes have necessarily declared the robbery to their bank. 400 euros shared between three, that's doesn't allow anyone to buy a new motorcycle. No way. And the most unusual is that you have two different stories in this film: the group and Chloée character problems with her half brother. They never meet. Strange but why not.
Did you know
- TriviaTo research the subject, writer/director Jeanne Herry couldn't take part in actual meetings of restorative justice, given that they are supposed to be a safe place, and nothing that is said there is meant to be told elsewhere. So instead, she went through three formations, which she felt were very insightful: the one which Fanny and Michel go through in the movie, the one to be a mediator, like Judith in the movie, and one in Québec via Zoom.
- ConnectionsReferences 12 Angry Men (1957)
- How long is All Your Faces?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Las dos caras de la justicia
- Filming locations
- Place des Prêcheurs, Aix-en-Provence, Bouches-du-Rhône, France(Chloé's apartment)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $9,065,011
- Runtime
- 1h 58m(118 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content