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Three Dancing Slaves

Original title: Le clan
  • 2004
  • Unrated
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Salim Kechiouche, Nicolas Cazalé, and Thomas Dumerchez in Three Dancing Slaves (2004)
DramaRomance

Three Algerian brothers struggle with violence, temptations, and finding purpose after their mother's death, as one seeks revenge, another tries keeping a job, and the youngest may be fallin... Read allThree Algerian brothers struggle with violence, temptations, and finding purpose after their mother's death, as one seeks revenge, another tries keeping a job, and the youngest may be falling for a capoeira dancer. Can they be a family?Three Algerian brothers struggle with violence, temptations, and finding purpose after their mother's death, as one seeks revenge, another tries keeping a job, and the youngest may be falling for a capoeira dancer. Can they be a family?

  • Director
    • Gaël Morel
  • Writers
    • Christophe Honoré
    • Gaël Morel
  • Stars
    • Nicolas Cazalé
    • Stéphane Rideau
    • Thomas Dumerchez
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gaël Morel
    • Writers
      • Christophe Honoré
      • Gaël Morel
    • Stars
      • Nicolas Cazalé
      • Stéphane Rideau
      • Thomas Dumerchez
    • 25User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
    • 46Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos23

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Nicolas Cazalé
    Nicolas Cazalé
    • Marc
    Stéphane Rideau
    • Christophe
    Thomas Dumerchez
    • Olivier
    Salim Kechiouche
    Salim Kechiouche
    • Hicham
    Bruno Lochet
    Bruno Lochet
    • Le père
    Vincent Martinez
    • Le "professeur"
    Jackie Berroyer
    • Robert
    Aure Atika
    Aure Atika
    • Emilie
    Nicolas Paz
    • Montana
    Mathias Olivier
    • Ryan
    Gary Mary
    • Luc
    Geordie Piseri-Diaz
    • Jérémy
    Clément Dettli
    • Henry
    Pierre Vallin
    • Sly
    Janine Ribollet
    • La mère de Sly
    Gilles Taurand
    • L'homme de la ferme
    Fabien Reboux
    • Garçon de ferme 1
    Geoffroy Rippoz
    • Garçon de ferme 2
    • Director
      • Gaël Morel
    • Writers
      • Christophe Honoré
      • Gaël Morel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.31.8K
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    Featured reviews

    10dedwardloftin-1

    Marvelous Non-Hollywood film making

    This is a beautifully made film. The acting and production values are superb. I think the reason that some reviewers have difficulty with this film is just that it's a very simple film...It's about three young men dealing with the loss of their mother, and a father who has lost his wife. Each brother finds his own way to deal with his loss; one through drug abuse and self injury, one becomes his father, and another discovers the courage to express his desires. Morel allows the characters to breathe, and respects us enough to expect us to pay attention to visual clues which are equally important as spoken dialog, without spelling out all the details. Morel is masterful at depicting the emotional tone between individuals and groups. For instance, the scene in which Christophe has just come home from prison is extremely complex. There's a great deal of homo-erotic nuance between the brothers and their friends in this scene. While Morel creates a space for it, and fully inhabits it, he never feels a need to make a point of it, to make a statement. There's simply no need for that. It's not that they are gay or straight, but precisely that the lines between gay and straight are rather fuzzy between these good friends. Putting that message into words would create a self conscious tone in the film which could destroy the dense fabric of emotional ambiguity in which the brothers live. It may well be that part of the brothers emotional problems have to do with the intensity of their feelings for each other, and their fear of expressing them, as well. All three have shortcomings, and none find a way to fully escape the trauma that defines their family. In the end, the ironic point is that the slave dancer is free enough to take a principled, self respecting stand to end a demeaning relationship, yet the three brothers who look down on him are enslaved to their past.

    The plot(and there is one) is entirely subservient to the emotional issues of the characters. If you're looking for a plot driven movie, this film has a plot, but the issues that drive the plot are almost entirely internal. This is a film not primarily about events, but how people respond to events and the ways in which their responses shape their lives. Viewed from that perspective, this is a unique and powerful film.
    9RNQ

    Short stories

    For the originality of its content and manner of telling, Gael Morel's "Le Clan" deserves wide art-house distribution. It does, however, need a better English title. Life may be difficult for people in the film, but they are not slaves and make choices that attempt to better their situations, if not always happily. Why not simply "A Clan," since nobody remembers Griffith's second title for "Birth of a Nation," or "Brothers"? Two boys practice a North African "slave dance," but for sport and release.

    The tightly edited movie can be thought of as short stories about three brothers and their father. With rapid shifts we keep learning new things about the characters. Sometimes one wonders what went on during a gap, but usually one can figure it out and the dialogue that would have worked it through would have been sentimental and out of character.

    One shot of the brothers huddled together watched by their father is difficult to justify realistically, but it works as a symbolic representation. If meanwhile one wants everything spelled out and sweetened, there is the Québec film "C.R.A.Z.Y." The brothers do maintain enormous familiarity. The youngest one, very drunk, is helped by a brother to vomit.

    If that's shocking, we have to take it as a fact of the milieu. The banlieux of France have recently been in the news. "Le Clan" goes much further with stories that lead one to care for the characters in the variety of their difficult situations of social derogation, dangerous labour, sexuality, and self-esteem.
    10swmyers

    A beautiful experience overall.

    We tend to laud films like American Beauty because they peel away the veneer of idealized American domesticity to reveal lives of quiet desperation. We take comfort in that -- knowing that even seemingly perfect lives are, under the surface, as miserable as we might view our own to be. In Morel's Le Clan (Three Dancing Slaves was the title I saw it under here in the States), we get a truer, less sanitized view of real lives laid bare. The desperation isn't quiet. It's crazed and exposed and all too believable. It's a very masculine film showing how men just do what they do. No apologies and, all too often, no explanations. Yet, somehow, it's relatable and understandable. Yes, it's a slice of pain punctuated with too few moments of what we would call joy. But sprinkled throughout are small glimpses of a more beautiful world. It's not lost on these characters. And it's not lost on the viewer. I found it haunting and heart-wrenching.
    4russ453

    An effort that aspires...but falls short......

    I believe this film aspired to tell us something, but I can't say that I discovered it in the course of viewing. To guess along with some other reviewers, perhaps the director wanted to show a realistic depiction of the despair and turmoil in the a family destabilized by the death of a parent and the effect on the survivors? But my question is - what is it about this director's way of telling the story that makes this film unique? Or different? I learn nothing from this film and come away asking 'why was this film made?' Perhaps this film resonates differently in its home market (France?) than in the U.S, but I can understand why most US audiences would be disinterested: the English title :Le Clan" mystifies me - (a translation issue perhaps? whatever - a poor choice for the US market) and besides the uninteresting theme, there is poor story development, gaps in some of the story that leave one groping for "what happened?" and an odd final scene: the ending of the film is just plain strange.

    The production team clearly had higher ambitions than an eye-candy film (and the homo-erotic visuals aren't bad) but the subject matter is largely depressing and the story itself poorly developed; i was never drawn into the brother's plight, their individual stories, or a sense of what their lives hold for them in the future. Despite the failures, there is one bright spot in Salim Kericouche, who is excellent, His character plays a friend of the family(Hachim) and it is through his eyes most of the story is told. The sub-plot of Hachim's affair with youngest brother Olivier was well done, but late in the film and inadequately explored. The final scene of the film of Olivier meeting the flying instructor and going into the cabin left me mystified; I'm not sure what it meant (???) I would like to rate this one higher, but I feel a bit generous giving it 4 stars out of a possible 10...
    7cosmicsoul477

    Convincing Acting, but Poor Plot Progression

    This movie exhibited wonderful filmography, surprisingly convincing performances and gorgeous young men. Where this film was lacking tremendously was the plot. Even though it had so much potential, it's execution was haphazard, and too much time was spent on unnecessary scenes, so toward the end it felt rushed, and the relationship between Olivier (Thomas Dumerchez) and Hicham (Salim Kechiouche) if it were developed more deeply, would have made for a wonderful film. Finally, the ending left me lacking as if it would continue next week. In other words, the entire film felt like an episode in a larger series. It felt unresolved; unfinished. And the extended Soliloquy, conveyed in the form of letters written to Christophe (I believe) certainly did not make up for a proper ending. That really frustrated me.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Featured in 2006 Glitter Awards (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Morning Bird
      Written by Luke Steele (as Steele, L.)

      Performed by The Sleepy Jackson

      (P) 2003 Music Australia - Copyright Control

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 16, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • TLA Releasing
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Le Clan
    • Filming locations
      • Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France
    • Production companies
      • Sépia Productions
      • Rhône-Alpes Cinéma
      • Centre Européen Cinématographique Rhône-Alpes
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $21,888
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,668
      • Sep 4, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $21,888
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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