Gloria mundi
Daniel leaves prison. He returns to Marseilles where Mathilda, his daughter, has just given birth. Nicolas, his spouse, a self-employed driver, is exhausted while Mathilda is a sales assistant on a trial basis. But, one night, Nicolas is assaulted by taxi drivers determined to reduce unfair competition.
Robert Guédiguian
Casts & Crew
Ariane Ascaride
Jean-Pierre Darroussin
Gérard Meylan
Anaïs Demoustier
Robinson Stévenin
Lola Naymark
Angelica Sarre
Pauline Caupenne
Yann Trégouët
Mathilde Ulmer
Dioucounda Koma
Adrien Jolivet
Karine Angeon
Ferdinand Verhaeghe
Simohamed Bouchra
Wilda Philippe
Maximilien Fussen
Sophie Payan
Cathy Darietto
Géraldine Loup
Syrus Shahidi
Kamel Kadri
Pascal Rénéric
Julien Breda
Mostéfa Stiti
Alice Lombard
Also Directed by Robert Guédiguian
Aram, a young man from Marseille of Armenian origin, blows up the Turkish ambassador's car in Paris. Gilles, a young cyclist who was passing at that precise moment, is seriously injured. Aram's mother feels guilty and feels the need to visit Gilles at the hospital and beg for his forgiveness, something that Gilles does not understand. Against the advice of his comrades in Beirut, Aram decides to go meet his victim.
From the director of Marius et Jeannette, this story of two working-class families is a fable with an optimist streak. A young black man, Francois, is wrongly accused of rape by a racist policeman. The story is told in voiceover by his childhood friend, neighbor, and the mother of his future child, Clementine, who is white. The city is Marseilles as in the previous film, symbolic with its churches, prisons and ruins. Except in this film, director Robert Guediguian also ventures outside, taking the story to Sarajevo; two different cities, one devastated by war, the other by a bad economy and unemployment. A la Place du coeur won a Special Jury Prize at the 1998 San Sebastian Film Festival and was also shown at the 1998 Toronto Film Festival and the 1998 Montreal Film Festival.
Set against the backdrop of the febrile atmosphere of post-Colonial Mali in the 1960s.
Centers on three childhood friends: Muriel, Francois and Rene. Partners in crime (burglaries, to be precise), the three end their "criminal" activities after one of their attempted burglaries fails. They vow never to see each other again until, however, Muriel's son is kidnapped, which leads the three to join forces again to get the ransom money.
A young journalist (Lespert) helps the French President compile his memoirs.