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La haine

  • 1995
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
217K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,507
9
Vincent Cassel in La haine (1995)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer3:34
2 Videos
99+ Photos
GangsterPsychological DramaCrimeDrama

24 hours in the lives of three young men in the French suburbs the day after a violent riot.24 hours in the lives of three young men in the French suburbs the day after a violent riot.24 hours in the lives of three young men in the French suburbs the day after a violent riot.

  • Director
    • Mathieu Kassovitz
  • Writer
    • Mathieu Kassovitz
  • Stars
    • Vincent Cassel
    • Hubert Koundé
    • Saïd Taghmaoui
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    217K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,507
    9
    • Director
      • Mathieu Kassovitz
    • Writer
      • Mathieu Kassovitz
    • Stars
      • Vincent Cassel
      • Hubert Koundé
      • Saïd Taghmaoui
    • 320User reviews
    • 98Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Top rated movie #221
    • Awards
      • 8 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos2

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 3:34
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    La Haine: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    Trailer 1:32
    La Haine: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    La Haine: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    Trailer 1:32
    La Haine: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]

    Photos115

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Vincent Cassel
    Vincent Cassel
    • Vinz
    Hubert Koundé
    Hubert Koundé
    • Hubert
    Saïd Taghmaoui
    Saïd Taghmaoui
    • Saïd
    Abdel Ahmed Ghili
    • Abdel
    Solo
    • Santo
    Joseph Momo
    • Homme standard
    Héloïse Rauth
    • Sarah
    Rywka Wajsbrot
    • Grand-mère Vinz
    Olga Abrego
    • Tante Vinz
    Laurent Labasse
    • Cuisto
    Choukri Gabteni
    • Frère Saïd
    Nabil Ben Mhamed
    • Garçon blague
    Benoît Magimel
    Benoît Magimel
    • Benoît
    Médard Niang
    • Médard
    Arash Mansour
    • Arash
    Abdel-Moulah Boujdouni
    • Jeune business
    Mathilde Vitry
    • Journaliste
    Christian Moro
    • Journaliste TV CRS
    • Director
      • Mathieu Kassovitz
    • Writer
      • Mathieu Kassovitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews320

    8.1217.2K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'La Haine' is celebrated for its raw depiction of social issues in Parisian suburbs, tackling themes like racism and police brutality. Its black-and-white cinematography and intense performances, especially by Vincent Cassel, are highly praised. The film's bold narrative and social relevance resonate strongly, though some critics find the plot lacking direction or the characters unconvincing. Despite mixed opinions, 'La Haine' is acknowledged for its powerful commentary and influence on French cinema.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    10hard2xplain

    this concerns everyone

    Moviemakers when filming French based films have traditionally tended to sentimentalise the ‘people' through the celebration of les petits gens, the little people of Pagnol and Clair as well as more recently the fantastical Parisian wonderland environments of Amelie and Moulin Rouge. With La Haine, young director Mathieu Kassovitz took the flipside of this and gave an illustration of the awfulness of life in the depressed blue-collar areas of Paris

    La Haine (‘Hate') begins after a night of rioting on a dismal housing estate on the northern outskirts of Paris and focuses on 24 hours in the lives of three close friends aged around 20. They are Vince (Vincent Cassel), an explosive working-class Jew, Hubert (Hubert Kounde), a handsome, soft-spoken black, and Said (Said Taghmaoui), a mercurial streetwise Arab. With little hopes or prospect of regular employment due to where they come from, the trio drift aimlessly, engaging in petty theft, and seething with aggressive resentment against an uncaring world. L'Avenir c'est nous (We Are the Future) is the ironic slogan on the estate's playground, but this is a film about people who believe they have no future.

    The quality of the performances from the 3 main actors, their conviction, the way they interact with one another and the vigour and fluency of Kassovitz's script and direction make this a very special movie indeed. Its full of action, detail, unexpected incidents and quirky humour. For instance, the boys have a bizarre encounter in a public lavatory in central Paris with a diminutive survivor of the Gulag that is as puzzling to them as it is to us. Does the story the Gulag survivor tells them have a deeper meaning than on the surface? Of course it does, and importantly this film makes you think as to what the metaphor means. Throughout violence is always on the point of erupting. There are constant confrontations with a brutal, racist police force, and Vince has a 44 Magnum revolver that a plainclothes cop lost during the riots, which we know will eventually be used on someone. However none of this ever descends into mere gratuitous violence like so many Hollywood films

    La Haine presents a state of affairs of the alienation faced by many young people in the ‘projects' in France, and all over the world. It doesn't offer any solutions, though the point is forcibly made that in France, as elsewhere, parts of the police force are part of the problem rather than the solution. Of course, much of what we are shown is familiar to us from British and American films .

    The strength of the film is that it neither glamorises nor patronises its characters. They hate their life because it's boring, and they despise the society that's created it for them, together with parks, football fields and a few mod cons with which to comfort them. In particular, they hate the police, who hate them right back. The film's other major achievement is to show in a tangible and very expressive way how a cycle of distrust and anger is created on both sides of this awful divide, so that there is very little anyone can do about it. In other words violence and hate breeds more violence and hate.

    A criticism that could be levelled is that in the US / UK versions the sub-titles don't help, pushing what is very authentic dialogue into something more like cliché, as well as pointless miss-translations that occur. However this is just a minor thing, and does not and should not reflect at all on the film itself.

    This certainly is one of the greatest films of the 1990s. Its one of those rare films that you will think about for the days and weeks after – not solely about the film itself, but on wider issues such as society, poverty and racism.
    8claudio_carvalho

    Life in Black and White

    When the youth Abdel goes to the hospital in coma due to a battering he receives at the police station, there are riots in the outskirts of Paris and one policeman loses his revolver. On the next morning, the Arab Said (Saïd Taghmaoui) summons his Jewish friend Vinz (Vincent Cassel) and they meet the black boxer Hubert (Hubert Koundé) in the slum where they live. Soon Vinz shows the missing gun that he found in the night before and he tells that if Abdel dies, he will revenge his friend killing a police officer. The trio of troublemaker and pothead friends head to the downtown of Paris where they spend the day asking for trouble. On the end of the long night, tragedy happens.

    The awarded "La Haine" is an impressive French movie that follows along 24 hours, the lives of three idle friends from a poor suburb of Paris that belong to a lost generation. I saw this movie in the 90's and today I have decided to see it again to compare the situations shown in the movie with what is recently happening in Brazil with several riots and it is amazing the similarities: lost youths with neither instruction nor job; unprepared and brutal police force; low quality of life in the slums or ghettos in the outskirts of the big cities (in Brazil, there are several slums also in the noble areas). The only difference is basically that France belongs to the First World and Brazil to the Third World; the rest is identical. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "O Ódio" ("The Hate")
    10gogoschka-1

    The most relevant French film of the last 20 years

    'Mean Streets' in french - and so much more. While there are so many references to Scorsese that you could almost call it an homage, this French milestone deals with the disillusioned youth who live in the outskirts of Paris in such an elegant - and honest - way, that I would go so far as to call it the most relevant French film of the last 20 years. But it's also a cinematic masterpiece and great, often hilarious entertainment. Everything fits: the musical choices, the outstanding performances by the 3 main characters, the beautiful cinematography and flawless direction. And, perhaps most of all, THE perfect script.

    As much a realistic portrayal of a torn society as it is an artistic achievement, 'La Haine' is essential viewing.

    My vote: 10 out of 10

    Favorite films: http://www.IMDb.com/list/mkjOKvqlSBs/

    Lesser-known Masterpieces: http://www.imdb.com/list/ls070242495/

    Favorite Low-Budget and B-movies: http://www.imdb.com/list/ls054808375/

    Favorite TV-Shows reviewed: http://www.imdb.com/list/ls075552387/
    9patricolomatteo

    A brilliant view on the decadence of this context.

    A very suggestive view of an environment abandoned to itself. I loved the fact that all the events happens in a single and normal day, as to highlight the fact that anything insane could happen in any moment. Brilliant execution, stable cinematography and good acting.
    howard.schumann

    Hate Begets Hate

    Reminiscent of Costas-Gavras' film Z with its rapid-fire dialogue and staccato rhythms, La Haine (Hate) directed by 28 year-old Mathieu Kassovitz, is a passionate look at racial tensions at a Paris housing project. Although drug dealing, urban decay, and police brutality have been shown in films before, rarely have they had the sense of vitality and urgency shown in La Haine.

    Three friends from different ethnic backgrounds live in the Bluebell housing projects on the outskirts of Paris. This is not the Paris of travel brochures or films like Amelie, but a desolate urban landscape, harsh and grim with housing projects that look as if they could be in any big city in the world. Vinz (Vincent Cassel), is a working class Jew; Hubert (Hubert Kounde), the most intelligent and self-reflective of the three, is an African boxer; and Said (Said Taghmaoui), an Arab from North Africa is younger but just as embittered.

    The film depicts their rage against the police whom they see as oppressors. Marginalized economically and politically, without jobs, parents who care, or hope for the future, the streets are their home and they are open targets for police who are shown as brutal and racist. In one startling scene, a veteran cop taunts and physically abuses Said and Hubert while training a rookie cop. The rookie can only look on and shake his head in disbelief.

    Shot in black and white, La Haine shows a single day in the lives of the three friends. Following a major riot in which a local teenager, Abdel, is critically wounded by the police, Vinz, the most volatile of the group, vows that if Abdel dies he will kill a cop to get even. Hubert wants to restrain him, and Said doesn't seem to care either way, as long as he can get his money from a drug dealer named Snoopy. When Vinz finds a Smith & Wesson 44 lost by the police during the riots, the spiral of violence escalates and builds toward a memorable conclusion.

    La Haine does not offer any solutions to social problems but clearly shows the anger and frustration of people who feel trapped by their circumstances. In its depiction of a society in free-fall, it also has immediacy. Three weeks after the film was released, riots broke out in the Brixton section of London, following the death of a young black man in police custody. Though it is a wake-up call for action on society's growing gap between rich and poor, La Haine makes a powerful statement that violence does not solve anything and that hate begets hate. Someone should pass the word to a few of the world leaders.

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    Related interests

    Marlon Brando and Salvatore Corsitto in The Godfather (1972)
    Gangster
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    Psychological Drama
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    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Real police officers were highly offended by how their police counterparts were portrayed in the movie. During the Cannes film festival premiere, they 'greeted' the arriving cast and crew by turning their backs to them in protest. Despite their efforts, the movie received a standing ovation from the crowd afterward.
    • Goofs
      The trip across Paris is strange: the three characters should arrive at the Saint-Lazare station (north-west of Paris), coming from Chanteloup Les Vignes. Yet, when they arrive, they are in front of the Montparnasse station (south of Paris), on the Rennes street. Then, they go to Asterix place, on the boulevard Pierre Ier of Serbia, close to Iena Place (west of Paris), and when they try to catch the last train, this time they are at the Saint-Lazare station, the right one to go back. But then, when they are on the roof, they see the Eiffel Tower and the Trocadero from the south-east, being probably close to Montparnasse station. Then, they come across a sculpture, L'Ecoute, in the Halles Garden (center of Paris), before going back. Hence, their trip goes: south, west, north-west, south and center of Paris.
    • Quotes

      Hubert: Heard about the guy who fell off a skyscraper? On his way down past each floor, he kept saying to reassure himself: So far so good... so far so good... so far so good. How you fall doesn't matter. It's how you land!

    • Crazy credits
      All the cast and crew credits are at the start of the film. The end credits only contain special thanks and the song credits.
    • Alternate versions
      In some English language subtitled (mainly American) versions the reference to the character of Said's friend who lives in the "posh towers" is 'Snoopy'. However, the untranslated dialogue says 'Asterix' and the woman who Vinz speaks to on the intercom laughs and says 'No, but his friend Obelix is here', whereas the translated version says 'No, but his friend Charlie Brown is.'. The reason Asterix and Obelix were changed to Snoopy and Charlie Brown in the subtitled version was because a lot of people are more familiar with those characters and possibly wouldn't understand the joke relating to Asterix and Obelix, which are two best friends in various French cartoon books by Goscinny & Uderzo.
    • Connections
      Featured in Three Kings (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Burnin' and Lootin'
      Written by Bob Marley

      Performed by Bob Marley

      © 1973 by Caiman Music Inc.

      avec l'aimable autorisation des EMI Music Publishing France SA et de Polygram Projets Speciaux

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    FAQ19

    • How long is La haine?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 23, 1996 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Le Pacte (France)
      • Les Productions Lazennec (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Yiddish
    • Also known as
      • El odio
    • Filming locations
      • Chanteloup-les-Vignes, Yvelines, France(Cité des Muguets, Cité La Noé)
    • Production companies
      • Les Productions Lazennec
      • Le Studio Canal+
      • La Sept Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €2,590,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $280,859
    • Gross worldwide
      • $762,618
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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