Zaneta

  • France Je m'en Sortirai (titre de festival) (plus)
Bande-annonce

Résumés(1)

Zaneta lutte sans cesse et jamais ne s'essouffle. Elle est Rom. Mère d'une fillette en bas âge. En quête de travail et de dignité, elle lutte pour intégrer une société tchèque qui lui est hostile. Son quotidien se transforme en tempête quand, menacé par les usuriers illégaux et les huissiers en col blanc, son compagnon David fait le pari de l'illégalité. Elle tente tout pour l'en détourner et trouver une solution à leur infortune. Elle devra batailler pour s'en sortir. (Norte Distribution)

(plus)

Critiques (6)

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I was very curious to watch this supposedly best Czech movie of 2014. It’s not all fun and games to try and shoot something from the world of multicultural nomads. Not only does it reflect in their way of life, which is not very understandable to most of us, but also in the poverty they live in which is awfully difficult to escape. In any case, I loved that the director Petr Václav chose fairly fresh faces and non-actors to portray this difficult theme. Because their performances in front of the camera were absolutely incredible, which really won me over. The human element was a little worse, because I found it absolutely lacking. There’s no time to be humane when we have to fight for survival. The worst thing is that you’re not only brought down by people around you that you can’t seem to get rid of, but also by your own family. The Way Out is therefore an absolutely all-telling title. I watched this for the Challenge Tour 2015. ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A film whose major failures (dramaturgical non-disciplinaryness, didactics and acting / staging awkwardness of some scenes) are balanced by the thriftiness and accuracy of observation, the precise ability to capture depressing fragments of reality and the simple fact that a person is not only the result of social, but also psychological limits. Moreover, The Way Out is far from humanistic blackmail. The film is sometimes very funny, often relentless and just as often absorbent. A Czech film that finally repays its debt to modern social drama and leaves far behind tumultuous attempts such as My Dog Killer, El Paso or Flower Buds. The Way Out simply shows the way out, though (half-heartedly here and there) it lags behind the uncompromising verism of the Dardenn brothers and the lyrical realism of Bence Fliegauf. [80%] ()

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Films from the Roma environment are based on three main approaches. The first is exotic romanticization, which is evident in some films from Western Europe, especially France (although the most typical example is probably the Soviet film Gypsies Are Found Near Heaven). The second approach tends to depict the Roma world from activist positions, emphasizing racism and portraying the community as a victim. The third approach looks at this community through the frustration of the white rose and comments on internet discussions. The Way Out tried to do things differently, striving for realism and raw presentation with what it had to work with. It doesn't always succeed, as the screenplay could have been better, but the element of authenticity is noticeable and there was a great effort here to make an honest film. It is an attempt at an honest testimony, and I value that. Overall impression: 75%. ()

NinadeL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Roma themes have been inherent in Czech cinema since its inception, but in recent years they have become much too common. It will probably never again have the poetry of Černý plamen, My Friend the Gypsy, or Larks on a String. Today we travel to various towns, roaming and looking for the way out. Quite surprisingly, we find that there is no way out. It's in the nature of these people, and even if there is someone among them who really tries, blood is simply stronger than water. ()

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Je me doutais bien que Je m'en sortirai serait l'un des meilleurs films de l'année. Dans mon classement personnel, il se hisse à une somptueuse deuxième place, car je ne pense pas que quoi que ce soit puisse détrôner Fair Play du sommet absolu. Au début, j’ai dû quelque peu mordre sur ma chique en me rappelant que c’étaient des amateurs qui jouaient, mais d’un autre côté, c’est toujours mieux que quand les acteurs ne jouent pas ! :-) L’ensemble est joliment entraîné par le personnage central de Žaneta, un personnage incroyable par moments dans son entêtement et la ténacité avec laquelle elle essaie sans cesse d’améliorer sa vie et de trouver les moyens de se sortir du gouffre. Je ne peux cependant pas prétendre qu’une telle personne ne puisse réellement exister. Presque tout le métrage dégageait intensément le désespoir, la désolation et la futilité, d’une façon similaire à ce que j’avais ressenti dans Poupata. Mais grâce à Žaneta et sa lutte incessante, un rayon de soleil se fraie dans ce désespoir. L’humour est également au rendez-vous pour atténuer quelque peu la lourdeur de l'ambiance. Les passages forts alternent avec des passages plus faibles qui sèment le doute chez le spectateur ou le laissent perplexe, mais dans l’ensemble, l’impression est positive. Petr Václav est l'un de nos réalisateurs les plus remarquables et je pense que le sujet des conflits sociaux l'intéresse au plus haut point. Je crains que Je m'en sortirai ne subisse le même sort que le film Jako Nikdy qui est sorti l’année passée et je lui souhaite donc d’être vu par beaucoup plus de monde. Même ici sur FilmBooster, il n’a que 222 évaluations ! ()

Remedy 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Petr Václav didn’t so much make me happy as piss me off. Although his The Way Out is very far from being tendentious and cannot be characterized in any other way than that it merely "describes or observes", when all’s said and done it is more of a psychological/family drama (from a foundation of social consciousness, of course), one that at times is unusually intimately emotional (which is why it pissed me off so much, because I was expecting something more generalizing). There were moments when I was truly not far from tears and had to repeatedly remind myself how well off I am (I went to college, I have a decent job, a car, an apartment, etc.). The only thing I had a bit of a problem with was the attractiveness of the main character (Klaudia Dudová is undoubtedly very pretty), not to mention her unusually high moral principles. Maybe it's just a result of my own limited perspective, but sometimes I found Žaneta just too cool. Otherwise, however, I would like to salute Petr Václav for how suggestively and sensitively he filmed a topic still very difficult to grasp. The non-actors didn’t bother me; on the contrary, the sometimes slightly clumsy natural acting deepened the authenticity of the work as a whole. ()