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Poison Friends(Les amitiés maléfiques)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

France · 2006
1h 40m
Director Emmanuel Bourdieu
Starring Malik Zidi, Thibault Vinçon, Alexandre Steiger, Thomas Blanchard
Genre Drama, Thriller

While studying at the Sorbonne, graduate students Eloi and Alexandre fall under the spell of the charismatic André, adopting him as their intellectual leader in exchange for their loyalty to him. But when Andre's brilliance begins to crumble, his followers must decide whether they've changed for the better or for the worse.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

70

The New York Times by A.O. Scott

As a group portrait of apprentice intellectuals the film has an almost documentary accuracy. It also has a degree of energy, an appetite for strong feelings and big ideas, notably missing in American movies about the young and overeducated, which tend to specialize in mumbled ironies and tiny epiphanies.

80

Salon by Andrew O'Hehir

Bourdieu's cast is terrific throughout. Any fellow academic brats out there will especially appreciate Jacques Bonnaffé, one of the greatest French comic actors, in an imperious turn as the severe, guru-like professor.

80

Village Voice by J. Hoberman

Not for nothing did this movie open the International Critics' Week (and win its grand prize) last year at Cannes; Poison Friends may be all talk, but it's cut like an action flick.

75

New York Daily News by Jack Mathews

If, unlike his friends, you don't take anything Andre says seriously, there is a wicked sense of fun about it, and you may even see a little of yourself in one of the characters.

90

Variety by Lisa Nesselson

A movie so unrepentantly French that viewers who enjoy truly Gallic pics can start (tastefully) salivating now.

91

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

While the young people chatter about life and literature with sometimes overbearing self-satisfaction, the astute filmmaker observes their pretentious gum-flapping with a mixture of amusement, compassion, and wised-up rue.

75

Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer

Four university students band together under the obnoxious mentorship of Andre (Thibault Vinçon), who is meant to be brilliant but, to me at least, seemed all too obviously a poseur. His betrayal of his friends deepens the movie.

60

The New Republic by Stanley Kauffmann

It is kept listenable--and watchable--because Bourdieu uses his knowledge of these people with winning ease. The story's conclusion verges on the grim, and it underscores Bourdieu's presumable theme: student life and talk are the last real vacations in many lives.

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