- Source: The Marchers
- Bonus Army
- Nabil Ben Yadir
- Penghargaan Magritte untuk Aktor Pendukung Terbaik
- Penghargaan Magritte untuk Aktris Pendukung Terbaik
- Penghargaan Magritte untuk Sutradara Terbaik
- Penghargaan Magritte untuk Penyuntingan Terbaik
- Penghargaan Magritte untuk Film Terbaik
- Penghargaan Magritte untuk Skenario Terbaik
- Pawai Garam
- Riot (film 2018)
- The Marchers
- The Night Marchers
- Bonus Army
- Marching
- Salt March
- March
- Selma to Montgomery marches
- Nightmarchers
- Jarrow March
- Burntollet Bridge incident
The Marchers (French: La Marche) is a 2013 French comedy-drama film by Nabil Ben Yadir. It is loosely based on the events surrounding the 1983 March for Equality and Against Racism.
The film's release in November 2013 coincided with the 30th anniversary of the march.
Plot
In 1983 France, teenaged Mohamed is shot by a policeman, but survives. Rejecting his friends' proposal of violent retribution, he proposes political action inspired by Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi. With two friends, and support from Dubois, the priest of Minguettes, they embark on a non-violent March for Equality and Against Racism from Marseille to Paris.
Cast
Tewfik Jallab as Mohamed
Vincent Rottiers as Sylvain
M'Barek Belkouk as Farid
Nader Boussandel as Yazid
Lubna Azabal as Kheira
Hafsia Herzi as Monia
Olivier Gourmet as Dubois
Charlotte Le Bon as Claire
Philippe Nahon as René Ledu
Jamel Debbouze as Hassan
Malik Zidi as Philippe, the RG
Simon Abkarian as Farid's father
Corinne Masiero as Dominique
Rufus as François, pastor
Benjamin Lavernhe as Thomas
Kévin Azaïs as Rémi
Françoise Miquelis as Georgina Dufoix
Finnegan Oldfield as Radio Host
Comparison to historical events
Answering a question about taking "liberties with the narration when telling a true story", director and co-writer Ben Yadir said: "You focus on the great History: the towns, the march of the torches, the return to Lyon, the death of Habib Grimzi, all these images that pull you back to reality... But at the start in Marseilles, there was a group of 32, and we obviously could not make a movie with 32 characters. We thus created 10 characters around which we built short stories."
Release
The Marchers had theatrical showings in North America as part of the Rendez-vous with French Cinema series 2014 program.
Reception
Boyd van Hoeij of The Hollywood Reporter said "[t]he film’s message of equality is loud and sincere but Yadir, here directing his second feature, struggles to maintain a workable entente between the downbeat story [...] with misplaced-feeling broad humor."
Peter Debruge of Variety called it "uplifting story of racial tolerance [which] should travel well."
Le Parisien gave it a positive review.
Accolades
References
External links
The Marchers at IMDb
‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› The Marchers at AllMovie
The Marchers at Rotten Tomatoes
La marche at Allocine
The Marchers / La Marche trailer on YouTube (with English subtitles)