L' Humanité [Criterion Collection]

L' Humanité [Criterion Collection]

Director: Bruno Dumont Cast: Emmanuel Schotté
Emmanuel Schotté
, Séverine Caneele
Séverine Caneele
, Philippe Tullier
Philippe Tullier
, Ghislain Ghesquère
Ghislain Ghesquère
Bruno Dumont
L' Humanité [Criterion Collection]

L' Humanité [Criterion Collection]

Director: Bruno Dumont Cast: Emmanuel Schotté
Emmanuel Schotté
, Séverine Caneele
Séverine Caneele
, Philippe Tullier
Philippe Tullier
, Ghislain Ghesquère
Ghislain Ghesquère
Bruno Dumont

DVD (Color)

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Overview

Bruno Dumont drew attention to his work with his first film, La vie de Jesus, which was a realistic portrayal of the miserable existence of people in a small town north of France. His second film, L'humanité, also takes place in Bailleul, the nondescript Flanders town of the previous film. Another similarity is that the hero of this film, Pharaoh de Winter (Emmanuel Schotte) is also a loner who lives with his mother. The house they live was owned by Pharaoh's grandfather, who was a famous painter. The opening scene shows Pharaoh walking in a freshly plowed field. He throws himself onto the moist soil to feel it and to smell it. Thirty-year-old Pharaoh is an unsophisticated and humble man. He is simple but not a simpleton. He has a crush on his sexy neighbor, factory worker Domino (Severine Caneele), a gentle soul in love with a brute named Joseph (Philippe Tullier). Pharaoh's daily life is quite dull; he is a police lieutenant, a job that does not agree with his mild temperament. He has to investigate the rape and murder of a little girl. What makes Pharaoh different from others is the suffering he goes through due to his uncontrollable empathy for other human beings. He is an emotional sponge condemned to carry the burden of all our wrongdoings. He is hungry for human feelings to the point that he would smell the face of the suspect he interrogates. In the final analysis, he also is a Jesus figure, like the hero of the first film. The message is there is no place for such figures in our cruel world. Bruno Dumont has a lot of compassion for his characters, which is evident in the way that he observes their daily lives and the conflicts that they are faced with. Explicit sexual scenes may offend some viewers. L'humanité won the Grand Prize of the 52nd Cannes Film Festival, 1999. Actress Severine Caneele shared the Best Actress award with Emilie Dequenne of Rosetta and Emmanuel Schotte won the Best Actor award.

Product Details

Release Date: 06/18/2019
UPC: 0715515230711
Original Release: 1999
Rating: NR
Source: Criterion Collection
Region Code: 1
Sound: [Dolby Digital Mono, Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround, Dolby Digital Stereo]
Language: English
Time: 2:28:00
Sales rank: 52,094

Special Features

Director-Approved DVD Special Edition Features; New 4k digital restoration, approved by Director Bruno Dumont; New interview with Dumont; Conversation between Dumont and critic Philippe Rouyer from 2014; Segment from a 2000 episode of the French television program Tendances featuring actress Severine Caneele; Segment from a 1999 French television news program featuring Dumont; Trailer; New English subtitle translation ; Plus: An essay by critic Nicholas Elliott

Cast & Crew

Performance Credits
Emmanuel Schotté Pharaon De Winter
Séverine Caneele Domino,Actor
Philippe Tullier Joseph
Ghislain Ghesquère Police Chief
Ginette Allegre Eliane
Daniel Leroux Actor
Schotte. Emmanuel Actor
Richard Cuvillier Composer

Technical Credits
Bruno Dumont Director,Screenwriter
Rachid Bouchareb Producer,Executive Producer
Jean Bréhat Producer,Executive Producer
Pierre Mertens Sound/Sound Designer
Jean-Pierre Laforce Sound/Sound Designer
Mathilde Muyard Sound Editor
Jean Brehat Producer

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Humanité
255. Chapters
1. A Body in a Field [6:23]
2. The Boss [1:44]
3. Domino [6:55]
4. Bike Ride [5:59]
5. Domino's Invitation [4:33]
6. A Rowdy Dinner [4:44]
7. Community Garden [6:17]
8. A Day At The Beach [8:33]
9. Pharaon's Friend [4:48]
10. Police Work [8:03]
11. Interviewing Children [7:05]
12. The Eurostar [7:31]
13. "Don't Look So Upset" [5:34]
14. The Loan [5:44]
15. The Factory [4:26]
16. Interrogation [4:21]
17. Strike [2:12]
18. Day Trips [1:07]
19. Invitation [6:23]
20. Protest [3:06]
21. Mental Hospital [5:56]
22. Pharaon And Domino [9:34]
23. "Wait For Me Here" [7:59]
24. Conversation In The Street [3:42]
25. A Suspect [4:02]
26. End Credits [8:06]
1. Color Bars [3:08]
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