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Tarfumes.com - Three Dancing Slaves

Three Dancing Slaves
List Price: $19.99
Our Price: $17.99
Your Save: $ 2.00 ( 10% )
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Manufacturer: Tla
Starring: Nicolas Cazalé, Stéphane Rideau, Thomas Dumerchez, Salim Kechiouche, Bruno Lochet
Directed By: Gaël Morel
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5

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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0807839002195
Format: Closed-captioned
Label: Tla
Manufacturer: Tla
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Tla
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2005-12-13
Running Time: 90
Studio: Tla
Theatrical Release Date: 2004

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Editorial Reviews:

This explosive film from Gaël Morel, award winning French writer-director (Full Speed, Under Another Sky) and actor (Wild Reeds), is a harrowing, intense drama of destruction, rebellion, redemption and love. Set against the backdrop of a sultry countryside near the French Alps, three motherless brothers collectively face the challenges of adulthood. There is Marc (Nicolas Cazale), a burgeoning criminal; Christophe (Stephane Rideau, Come Undone), who is trying to re-start his life after prison; and Olivier (Thomas Dumarchez), a capoeira fighter in love. As the young brothers wrestle with their transitions into manhood, they must each escape the tyrannical rule of their father to carve out their own places in life. Stunning cinematography and powerful performances help make Three Dancing Slaves an erotic, breathtaking film about family and the struggle of making your mark on the world around you.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: A Way to Live
Comment: Gael Morel creates an interesting & unusual tale about three brothers, "Le Clan." Stephane Rideau from "Come Undone" plays Christophe, apparently the older brother who is in jail when their mother passes. Olivier is the younger timid brother played by Thomas Dumerchez. He begins a romance with Hicham played by Salim Kechiouche who teaches him an athletic slave dance. The film hinges on Marc played by Nicolas Cazale. Cazale's shaved head gives him a stark look throughout the film. He won a Best Actor award for "Le Grand Voyage" in 2005 from the Newport International Film Festival. He plays Marc well, a young man whose anger is barely controlled. When drug dealers make him kill his beloved dog, Marc swears revenge, injuring himself when unable to go through with a planned hit & run. Bruno Lochet plays the father who is emotionally lost after his wife's death, unable to give his sons the strong hand they need. Morel toys with the audience, particularly in a sensual bath between Marc & his dog and with the three brothers sleeping arm in arm in nature's birthday suits as their father stares at them. Their lives splinter as Christophe gets promoted at a meat packing plant and plans to marry. Marc tries to recover from his severe injury. Olivier breaks up with his boyfriend and appears to court the hand gliding instructor. There is no great climax at which someone wins & loses. Rather we have four men dealing with a tremendous burden of grief, each trying to find reason and a way to live. Enjoy!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Marvelous Non-Hollywood film making
Comment: This is a beautifully made film. The acting and production values are superb. I think the reason that some reviewers have difficulty with this film is just that it's a very simple film...It's about three young men dealing with the loss of their mother, and a father who has lost his wife. Each brother finds his own way to deal with his loss; one through drug abuse and self injury, one becomes his father, and another discovers his courage and learns how to love. Morel allows the characters to breathe, and respects us enough to expect us to pay attention to visual clues which are equally important as spoken dialog, without spelling out all the details. Morel is masterful at depicting the emotional tone between individuals and groups. For instance, the scene in which Christophe has just come home from prison is extremely complex. There's a great deal of homo-erotic nuance between the brothers and their friends in this scene. While Morel creates a space for it, and fully inhabits it, he never feels a need to make a point of it, to make a statement. There's simply no need for that. It's not that they are gay or straight, but precisely that the lines between and straight are rather fuzzy between these good friends. Putting that message into words would create a self conscious tone in the film which would destroy the dense fabric of emotional ambiguity between the brothers. It may be that the brothers emotional problems have to do with the intensity of their feelings for each other, as well. In the end, each takes his own path. The plot is entirely subservient to the emotional issues of the characters. If you're looking for a plot driven movie, this film has a plot, but the issues that drive the plot are almost entirely internal. This is a film not primarily about events, but how people respond to events and the ways in which their responses change their lives. Viewed from that perspective, this is a unique and powerful film.




Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: oddly confusing
Comment: This movie was just another version of TLA's way of luring in gay people with a sexual cover to another droll movie, but this time it really made no sense!! The plot, if there was one, was very hard to comprehend. Three brothers each trapped in their own vices, but you never get to fully explore any of their lives to realate or sympathize for them. A miss for me!!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Different
Comment: This is the second movie from director Gael Morel I have watched recently. The first one being "Full Speed." I rated "Full Speed" poorly. By watching this second movie, I understand why. I feel this director is very unorthodox in his expression of gay issues, and by being not familiar with his style of directing, am missing the point of what is being presented.

His stories are about a bunch of people, mostly men, in a particular point of their lives. There is no main gay theme. These people could be gay or straight. There is violence in one or two of the characters. He is very much appreciative of the human male form, as all of his actors are very athletic, good looking, perfect bodies (no nerds.) He also makes an emphasis on Arab men, particularly from Algeria, North Africa.

This movie revolves around three brothers, Marc, Christophe, and Olivier (the youngest.) Their mother had died painfully and all the boys missed her terribly. Christophe is in jail. He comes out of jail toward the middle of the movie and joins the family (he is straight.) There is one more boy, Hicham, an Arab young boy who is gay and friend of Marc. This boy becomes romantically involved with Olivier. Olivier being the only gay som in the family (he loose his virginity to Hicham without any of the other brothers knowing.) I am not sure what Marc is.

Marc gets into trouble with the local thugs (drug dealers) because he owes them money. He gets beaten by them and he is forced to throw his prize dog over a cliff to the town river. I almost turn the movie off as I am an animal lover (I don't think there was any cruelty to the animal, it is just part of the story.) Marc wants revenge and to kill the thug who hurt him and kill his dog. He wants his brother Christophe to help him but he refuses. He then becomes bitter towards his brother. Toward the end of the movie, Marc gets hurt seriously by attempting to run over his nemesis, he misses his target totally, hitting a tree in the process. His anger got the best of him.

Christophe gets a job in town after his release from jail and he gets promoted right way, and he finds a girl who is going to marry him, and his life seems to be progressing nicely. Hicham dumps Olivier (I do not know why) after using him. Hicham is a dancer and teaches Oliver the art. Olivier becomes real good (competitive). Marc becomes paralyzed but makes a struggling recovery. The final scene shows Olivier going into a building with a hand gliding instructor. Hicham has taught him to hand glide.

Even though I found this movie to be better than "Full Speed", the plot was again somewhat confusing. These are not your ordinary "gay" movies. The scene of the three brothers, in an interlocking position, sleeping naked, is very provocative and erotic, talking about brotherly love (the father was totally mesmerized watching.)

The movie near the French Alps making the scenery rather beautiful.





Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: The Whole Of This Film Is Not Greater Than The Sum Of Its Parts
Comment: I'm always sure I lose much of a movie with subtitles so I'll blame myself for not being wild about this one, in French with English subtitles; but all the fault cannot be mine. THREE DANCING SLAVES directed by Gael Morel is set in a small town in France where three young brothers, Marc, Christophe and Olivier, are trying to put their lives together after the death of their mother. They argue constantly with their father and often with each other. The angst-ridden Marc gets into real trouble over a soured drug transaction; Christophe gets a dreary job in a meat plant after getting out of prison; and Olivier, the seventeen-year-old, is trying to find himself.

Some of the landscape photography is gorgeous, and the acting by these three young men is certainly acceptable. There is a tremendously moving scene where Marc and Olivier secretly scatter their mother's ashes. The film never quite comes together, however, and some of the footage is completely inexplicable. For example, why does Marc need to shave his pubic area? Additionally although these three young men play brothers, they look nothing like each other. The film ultimately leaves the viewer with more questions than answers.


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