We Need a Vacation (2004)
Facts
| Directed by | Didier Bivel |
| Cast | Thylda Barès; Siraboula Sissoko; Lilly-Fleur Pointeaux; Thomas Pitiot; Ibrahim Koma; Aymen Saïdi; Albert Goldberg; Nabil El Bouhairi; Makan Fofana; Hawa Yakaré Sissoko; Marie-Philomène Nga; Moussa Sanogo; Laura Mas Navarro; Hiam Abbass; Bernard Blancan; Nathalie Spitzer; Roland Marchisio; Tadie Tuene; Rachid Debbouze; Jonathan Haddad and Albert Goldberg |
| Theatrical Release | July 22, 2004 |
| DVD Release | May 30, 2006 |
| Running Time | 86 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 667443529149 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 30 1:38 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Picture This!, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Letterboxed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo) Or 22 new from $13.50, 9 used from $12.95, 1 collectible from $24.29 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A dissapointment...to say the least... |
on the dvd; secondly, I find it profoundly disturbing that amazon com would even suggest, among it's "relevant" tags, descriptions such as "gay, full frontal nudity, boys nude", well..see for yourself; I wouldn't have ordered it if I would have read these false tags; there is no gay subject matter, no unnecessary nudity, none of those titillating adjectives amazon uses to attract what one may wonder: weirdoes?
Getting back to the movie, it is well made, well photographed, well acted for sure but again, I find it very strange that such praise is written in the sense of "heartwarming, refreshing".
It is nothing of the sort; two little boys are bored; it's summer and they cant afford to go to camp like their friends; so they stay home,
nothing much to do, nothing much to say;(been there, done that, like most kids); one of the boys is brutally beaten by his older "thug" brother, a very disturbing scene; I dont care for that fake "cinéma vérité"; I wont tell you how the movie ends, not to kill your buzz but it's not a happy ending, typical of the french who take the long road around to say absolutely nothing new or significant, most of the time. I'm being harsh, I know, but I've had my fill of cinematic nonsense.
If you like that old style mock "cinéma d'auteur", by all means, waste your money. But if you expect, like Le Figaro says (I cant imagine why)
that it is "refreshing and heartwarming", well, if you like to see sad kids and empty lives colored with gratuitous violence,well... I guess to each his own.
I would rather highly recommend "You are not Alone" and "Les Aiguilles Rouges" in the french repertoire; the first is a dutch film that was way ahead of it's time (and still is) and deals with taboo subject matter in a tastefull way, as seen from the young teenagers of the flower power era; a True Masterpiece; and "Les Aiguilles Rouges" is a true story of boy scouts who, neglected by their adult leaders, are left to fend for themselves, often in peril for their lives (but they make it safely back to camp); the psychological underlayers and confrontations between different types of personalities make it a very interesting character study; not a dull moment in a movie that has many well placed silences that speak louder than words and bring you back to your own childhood and
questionings and balance between friendship, confrontation, fear, self doubt and mostly, a certain natural courage that overcomes the obstacles thrown their way.
Sorry but "We need a vacation" has been done ad nauseam and this one deserves to be forgotten. March 29, 2008
| It was ok |
| A Completely Delightful and Tender Little Film About Disenfranchised Kids |
Lucien (Aymen Saïdi) lives with his father (Bernard Blancan), mother (Hiam Abbass), young sister Pamela (Laura Mas Navarro), and his tough streetwise older brother José (Nabil El Bouhairi) in a small flat. Close by is his African friend Adama (Ibrahim Koma) and his equally poor family of father (Makan Fofana), mother (Marie-Philomène Nga) and sister Fanta (Hawa Yakaré Sissoko). As school ends the kids whose families have money take them on a vacation, a state neither Lucien nor Adama can afford despite their obsession with that luxury. The two boys manipulate funds and ideas and ultimately come up with the idea of secretly jumping aboard a RUV of a family headed for the beach. BUT despite the success of their plan and the encouragement of the daughter of the van's owners, the boys end up not at the beach but at a nudist camp, a fact that makes them flee! Upon returning home both boys' families punish their activities and when Lucien seeks comfort from his older brother, José beats him and tells him to grow up. In the end the boys finagle their way to the beach, but of course by this time vacation time is over and they are on an empty beach re-evaluating their lives.
The cast is uniformly strong, the writing is excellent, and the camera work not only captures the claustrophobia of the projects but also opens up the vistas of the boys' imaginations. It is a fine little film, one deserving of a wide audience. Grady Harp, January 07
January 7, 2007
| A Must See! |
| Donne-moi des vacances! |
Contains some genuinely amusing moments as well as the tristesse of their lives. November 26, 2004
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