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Page 1: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

La HaineLa HaineRéalisateur

Mathieu Kassovitz

Lesson Objectives:In this lesson, you will learn to

analyse the opening scene of the film and discuss its effect on the

audience.

Page 2: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Watch the opening scene of La HaineLa Haine and take notes on the

following:Ou? Quand? Qui? Son?

Couleurs? Ambiance? Dialogue? Action/ activité?

Page 3: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Virtuoso noir: the aesthetics of La HaineLa Haine

• The film begins with a grainy image of a young man, seen from the back, facing a line of police and shouting at them.

• “ vous n’êtes que des assassins. Vous tirez. C’est facile.

Nous, on n’a pas d’armes, on a que des cailloux ” • “You are nothing but assassins. It is easy for you, you have weapons. We only have stones”

• His look and accent immediately establish him as from the banlieu. There is no music.

• There follows a black screen with the beginning of the credits and then a man’s voice (Hubert) telling a story about a man falling from a 50 floor building, over a terrestrial globe that bursts into flames as a home-made bomb (in a bottle) is thrown at it.

• In those few seconds, several themes are planted.

Page 4: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Themes

• Uneven confrontation between young people and the police.

• Violence• The banlieu• Notion that the situation is global• It will lead to an explosion

• In the first few seconds: the “message” of the film.

Page 5: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Then...

• Immediately afterwards, a montage of news reel images begins, over which the credits are imposed.

• Soundtrack: Bob Marley “Burnin’ and lootin’”, identifiable and political.

• “ How many rivers do we have to cross, Before we can talk to the Boss.”

• Refers to the police as “uniforms of brutality”

Page 6: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Duration.

• 5 minutes and 9 seconds. • Kassovitz watched hours of newsreel

footage over the 10 years leading up to La Haine.

• On first viewing, appears as a blur of images of police and young demonstrators moving rapidly.

• Average shot length = 4 seconds (some images slowed down.

• Looking more closely, we can divide the montage into 3 sections.

Page 7: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

First Section

• Shots of CRS police and young people.• CRS = Compagnies Républicaines de Sécurité (CRS)

are the riot control forces and general reserve of the French National Police.

• Ranks of police uniforms against softer shapes of students.

• Students begin with quiet marching and dancing but end with looting.

• In synchronisation with the words on the soundtrack.

Page 8: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Second section

• Individual violence evoking 2 victims of police violence and the demonstrations that follow their deaths.

• See the body of “Malik Oussekine” which medics are trying to revive.

• A poster says “n’oubliez pas, la police tue”• CRS = SS• Graffiti asking for justice to be done for

Makome M’Bowole. “Que justice soit faite pour Mako”

• 2 deaths, seven years apart appear merged.

Page 9: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Third Section• Sections 1 and 2 shot during the day, 3rd

section shows banlieu at night.• Burning Centre Commercial.• Violence is more extreme suggesting

retaliation for police violence in the first 2 sections.

• 1/3 way through, Bob Marley song decreases, replaced by shouting, breaking glass, thuds.

• Towards the end, voice over of a television presenter talking to camera, finally a picture of Abdel reportedly in a coma in hospital.

• The montage is identified as television when it is switched off and fades to a white spot before the film proper begins.

Page 10: La  Haine Réalisateur Mathieu  Kassovitz

Conclusion

• Documentary style, preparing us for the fiction to come.

• Structure and progression, contains the shape of the film to come.

• Greater violence, day to night, contrast between city and banlieu.

• Blurs the boundary between reality and fiction in image and sound.

• Move from montage to fiction contrasts grainy, dirty blurred figures of riot at night, with sharp elegant black and white day time images.

• The switch from television to film.