Saint Omer

2022 [FRENCH]

Drama

8
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 94% · 137 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 54% · 50 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.8/10 10 4981 5K

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Plot summary

A novelist attends the trial of a woman accused of killing her 15-month-old daughter by abandoning her to the rising tide on a beach in northern France. But as the trial continues, her own family history, doubts, and fears about motherhood are steadily dislodged as the life story of the accused is gradually revealed.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 21, 2023 at 03:50 PM

Director

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1.1 GB
1280*692
French 2.0
PG-13
24 fps
2 hr 2 min
Seeds 5
2.26 GB
1920*1038
French 5.1
PG-13
24 fps
2 hr 2 min
Seeds 13
1.1 GB
1280*690
French 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
2 hr 2 min
Seeds 3
2.26 GB
1916*1032
French 5.1
PG-13
23.976 fps
2 hr 2 min
Seeds 12

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by steveinadelaide 7 / 10

Complex, Empathetic, Thought-Provoking

Saint Omer is a 2022 French legal drama film directed by Alice Diop and starring Kayije Kagame and Guslagie Malanda. It is based on the true story of Fabienne Kabou, a mother who left her 15-month-old daughter on a beach to be drowned by the tide in 2013. The film follows Rama (Kagame), a pregnant novelist who attends the trial of Laurence Coly (Malanda), the fictionalized version of Kabou, to write a modern adaptation of the ancient Greek myth of Medea, who killed her children to punish her unfaithful husband.

Saint Omer is a powerful and nuanced exploration of the complex issues of motherhood, immigration, identity, and justice. Diop, known for her documentaries, brings a realistic and empathetic approach to the story, avoiding sensationalism and judgment. She also attended the real trial of Kabou in 2016, which inspired her to make the film. The film does not attempt to justify or condemn Coly's actions but rather to understand her motivations and circumstances.

The story is divided into two parts: the first one focuses on Rama's perspective as she observes the trial and interviews Coly in prison, while the second one shifts to Coly's flashback as she recounts her life in France and Senegal, her relationship with her partner and daughter, and her mental state leading up to the crime. The film contrasts Rama and Coly to highlight their similarities and differences as women of Senegalese origin living in France. Both face racism, sexism, isolation, and pressure from their families and society but have different privileges, opportunities, and choices.

The movie also draws parallels between Coly's story and the Medea myth, showing how both women are driven by love, betrayal, anger, and despair to commit an unthinkable act. The film uses references to Medea throughout, such as the names of the characters (Rama is an anagram of Mara, Medea's sister), the locations (Berck is similar to Corinth, where Medea killed her children), and the dialogue (Coly quotes lines from Euripides' play). The film also shows how Rama uses the myth to cope with her fears and doubts about becoming a mother.

Saint-Omer features excellent performances from the two lead actresses, who convey a range of emotions with subtlety and intensity. Kagame portrays Rama as a smart, ambitious woman who is also vulnerable and conflicted. Malanda portrays Coly as a tragic and complex figure who elicits sympathy and horror. The film also has a strong technical aspect, with beautiful cinematography by Claire Mathon (who also shot Portrait of a Lady on Fire), an atmospheric score by Thibault Deboaisne, and tight editing by Amrita David.

The one thing that undermines the greatness of Saint-Omer is the pacing. The first time I watched the film, I found the pacing unbearable. But, I decided to see it a second time, embraced the slowness, and found I was noticing aspects of the story I had missed the first time. I think, though, that the pacing will be a challenge for some viewers.

Saint Omer is a film that challenges us to think beyond the headlines and stereotypes and confront our biases and assumptions. The film raises questions without giving easy answers and invites empathy without condoning violence. It is a film that shows how art can be a way to deal with trauma and pain and how it can be insufficient or inadequate. It is a film that was with me long after it ended - the second time around.

Reviewed by steiner-sam 7 / 10

Asks many questions and provides no answers

It's a psychological, legal drama set in 2016 in Saint-Omer, Pas-de-Calais, France. It follows a writer attending the trial of a Senegalese woman who has admitted to the infanticide of her 15-month-old daughter. It's based on and uses some of the transcripts of the actual trial of Fabienne Kabou.

Rama (Kayije Kagame) is a novelist and university professor who travels to Saint-Omer for the trial of Laurence Coly (Gustagie Malanda). Laurence admits she left her baby on the beach while the tide was coming in, assuming the baby would be washed out to sea. The baby died, but the body was discovered, and the police quickly located Laurence. She had a relationship with a much older married Frenchman, Luc Dumontet (Xavier Maly).

La Présidente du tribunal (Valérie Dréville) does most of the questioning of Laurence and the other witnesses, including Dumontet and Laurence's mother, Odile Diatta (Salimata Kamate). Rama observes each day of the trial and reflects on her own pregnancy (she's four months along) and the trial's meaning for her. Like Laurence, Rama is of African heritage and in a relationship with a white man. Laurence is a very complex character who invokes magic, spells, and an outsider self-perception as part of her explanation. Rama refers to Medea in Greek mythology. The film ends inconclusively.

"Saint Omer" asks many questions and provides no answers. Issues include sanity, otherness, mixed-race relationships, and personal agency. There is much silence in the film that, at times, is unnerving. Kagame and Malanda are both very striking in their appearance. The women are the strong characters in this film. The lack of any resolution I found disappointing.

Reviewed by Xstal 6 / 10

Medea Musings...

In a court room in Saint Omer a lady's tried, it's quite bizarre just what she's done, the reasons why, as she's questioned by the beak, the facts and reasons she doth seek, as to why a baby girl was drowned and died. The defendant makes the case that there's a curse, that's been administered by someone who'a averse, to the things that she has done, the way she's lived under the sun, it's intriguing but it's also quite perverse. In the stalls a woman listens with intent, the story of a life, the way that it's been bent, finds too many parallels, in the tale that she sells, and it causes her some confusing lament.

It's a curious piece of filmmaking based on real events, events that are perhaps more relatable to the filmmaker than anyone else, but it's a fascinating watch and might introduce you to the ways of the French legal system, some Greek mythology and/or the conditioning that some people undergo (intentional or otherwise) that can result in the most extreme of outcomes.

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