A Prophet

2009 Crime Drama

An impressionable and vulnerable Arabic man gets thrust into a hellish prison, and ironically discovers greater opportunities for success than he ever possessed outside of the bars, in this violent melodrama from French succès d'estime Jacques Audiard (The Beat That My Heart Skipped). Tahar Rahim stars as Malik El Djebena, a petty criminal incarcerated for six years. Once inside and subjected to all of the standard brutalities that most prisoners endure, he is quickly educated in the "ways" of the prison, an institution torn violently between gangs of Corsicans and Arabs. The head Corsican thug, César Luciani (Niels Arestrup), offers Malik an ultimatum: either he rubs out an Arab inmate named Reyeb (Hichem Yacoubi), or he himself dies. Not only does Malik succeed with the hit, he earns the begrudging respect of the other prisoners, and -- after securing several days' release for good behavior -- uses off-time to forge a deeper and more multi-layered network of criminal ties than he ever dreamed possible. But as his own power and confidence grow, they threaten to outstrip César's own insistence on submission and obedience at all costs. more..

Director: Jacques Audiard

Starring: Tahar Rahim,Niels Arestrup, Adel Bencherif, Reda Kateb, Hichem Yacoubi

Reviews

  • One of those rare films in which the moral stakes are as insistent and thought through as the aesthetic choices.

    Manohla Dargis - The New York Times

    29 November 2012

  • To borrow a marketing phrase from another, very different film, A Prophet really is the movie that reminds you why you love the movies. Especially movies like this one.

    Kenneth Turan - Los Angeles Times

    29 November 2012

  • The best performance in the film is by Arestrup as Cesar. You may remember him from Audiard's "The Beat That My Heart Skipped" (2005), where he played a seedy but confident father who psychically overshadows his son.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    29 November 2012

  • There's also no romanticizing on the part of the director, who proceeds with calm, unshowy attentiveness (even in the midst of scenes of violence), creating a stunning portrait of an innately smart survivor for whom prison turns out to be a twisted opportunity for self-definition.

    Lisa Schwarzbaum - Entertainment Weekly

    29 November 2012

  • A new crime classic.

    Peter Travers - Rolling Stone

    29 November 2012

Awards

  • Best Foreign Language Film of the Year

    Academy Awards (2010)

     
  • Best Foreign Feature Film (Årets utenlandske kinofilm)

    Amanda Awards, Norway (2010)

     
  • Best Foreign Language Film

    Austin Film Critics Association (2010)

  • Best Film Not in the English Language

    BAFTA Awards (2010)

  • Best Non-American Film (Bedste ikke-amerikanske film)

    Bodil Awards (2011)