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L'Enfant
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After learning he has a newborn son, a small-time thief attempts to go straight - but not until his amorality is pushed to its breaking point - in this social-problem drama from writer-directors Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne. Eighteen-year-old Sonia (Déborah Francois) has just given birth to a baby boy. The baby's father Bruno (Jérémie Renier) is panhandling in the street when Sonia tracks him down, and he shows little interest in fathering the child, or even providing a roof over the heads of the fledgling family. As the new and inexperienced mother navigates the bleak industrial landscape of the small Belgian town they live in, Bruno falls in with a clandestine group that buys and sells healthy children on the black market. He tragically learns that one avaricious decision, made in an instant, can affect the lives of everyone in his orbit. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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"L'Enfant (The Child) Dispossessed 20-year-old Bruno lives with his 18-year-old girlfriend Sonia in a Belgian steel town. Their lives change forever when Sonia gives birth to their son. Unprepared to raise a child and in desperate need of money, Bruno sells the baby to a black market connection who promises to find an adoptive home. When Bruno realizes the error of his actions, he sets out to retrieve his son. Winner of the Golden Palm Award at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. “One of the great " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Another superb drama from Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, L'Enfant succeeds not because it illuminates anything about a black market for children (the characters motivations are entirely personal, not social), but in the way a finely detailed character study pays off in its final redemptive moments. The story has one major hurdle to overcome and that's to watch its main subject, an already hard to like immature teenager, Bruno (Jérémie Rénier, who also starred in La Promesse), sell his baby and have the audience invested in the story enough to care to watch him get him back. However, the impersonal, documentary-style camerawork and incredibly realistic performances by Rénier and Déborah François do not naturally garner Bruno any sympathy. Rather the Dardenne brothers, who have a strong Christian streak throughout their work, demand that the audience feel compassion for the characters. Thus, the power of its enigmatic ending depends on the viewer and how much credit he or she wants to give the irresponsible thief. Despite the quotidian details and patient pacing, the movie can be incredibly suspenseful, and its subtle yet airtight structure unexpectedly powerful, particularly in an extended sequence where Bruno and his young friend Steve (Jérémie Segard) rob a lady and are chased on their scooter and whenever Bruno takes possession of the baby. Robert Bresson's Pickpocket, particularly the ending, has been cited as a prime influence on this film. Like the Dardennes' other films, L'Enfant takes place in an anonymous industrial city in Belgium and was shot in their hometown of Seraing. It won the Palme d'Or at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Michael Buening, All Movie Guide
 

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