Village Voice by Chris Packham
The exhausting and unrelatable Our Day Will Come escalates to a violent rampage as essentially unpleasant and nonsensical as its characters.
France · 2010
1h 30m
Director Romain Gavras
Starring Vincent Cassel, Olivier Barthélémy, Justine Lerooy, Vanessa Decat
Genre Drama, Comedy
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Redheaded teen Remy is bullied by his soccer teammates and drawn into fights with his younger sister and mother in their cramped apartment. After a flare-up of domestic violence, he flees home and is tracked down by a bitter guidance counselor, Patrick, also a redhead. Patrick looks upon Remy’s sullen insolence with both sympathy and disdain and decides to toughen him up...
Village Voice by Chris Packham
The exhausting and unrelatable Our Day Will Come escalates to a violent rampage as essentially unpleasant and nonsensical as its characters.
Our Day Will Come is the kind of polarizing, in-your-face movie that we too rarely see in cinema these days.
Once it’s evident that there’s hardly a point to all the random mischief — or that the point is precisely that there isn’t one — the idea of watching a pair of grown men inflect violence upon innocent bystanders feels awfully tedious
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
It's a road movie that runs out of road – and out of ideas.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
Our Day Will Come speeds along for a while on the fumes of its own audacity until it can no longer hide the lack of coherent ideas in the tank.
Maryam accidentally kills her husband, and the only way to suspend her death sentence is if Nasser’s daughter forgives her on live television.