Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Subtle filmmaking and true-as-life acting make this an acute psychological drama with an engrossing sociological subtext. It stands with Doillon's best work.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France, Morocco · 2003
1h 52m
Director Jacques Doillon
Starring Pascal Greggory, Najat Benssallem, Ilham Abdelwaheb, Hassan Khissal
Genre Drama, Romance
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Fred is a wealthy middle-aged Frenchman who lives in Marrakech, emotionally bankrupt amidst his lavish garden and estate. He yearns for Raja, a 19 year-old local girl, orphaned and impoverished scraping by to survive. Fred’s attempts to seduce her prove difficult amidst the disparities in age, culture, income, and outlook on life, as mutual attempts at manipulation prove dangerous.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Subtle filmmaking and true-as-life acting make this an acute psychological drama with an engrossing sociological subtext. It stands with Doillon's best work.
Intriguing, provocative and very well acted.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
There's little to enjoy in this unsettling tale, but Doillan's unblinking depiction of manipulation and desperation stays with you long after the characters make the deals that seal their unjust fates.
It plays out as an unsettling solipsistic love story--an account of erotic obsession with a family relation to "Of Human Bondage."
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Doillon never lets his characters slide into cliche. They act and react from a wealth of contradictory impulses and long-standing prejudices in this masterful tale of frustrated desire.
Raja, which is basically a dark comedy about how this odd couple manipulate each other, is extremely well acted, though the direction by Jacques Doillon is on the leisurely side.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
What begins as a sorry exercise in cynical seduction becomes a case of amour fou.
Even without all the other complications, Doillon's handling of the language gap alone gives Raja a pungent dramatic edge.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
What distinguishes Raja from every other movie to contemplate the treacherous intersection of passion, avarice and power is its unsettling emotional honesty. The two central performances are so spontaneous and mercurial that the reckless flirtation seems to be unfolding before your eyes.
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