An overlong, dramatically unbalanced picture whose emotional wallop gets somewhat diffused.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
An entire family chronicle, along with four decades of French social and economic history, is recapitulated as a lavish, hectic dinner, complete with music and belly dancing. It will leave you stunned and sated, having savored an intimate and sumptuous epic of elation and defeat, jealousy and tenderness, life and death, grain and fish.
Richly enjoyable and consistently surprising.
Kechiche digs a good story out of the flux, and, in the movie's final forty minutes, the suspense is terrific.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
Kechiche takes his time, allowing us to know the characters as if we live next door. But be warned: for those who come to feel like a member of the family, the unexpected end may seem strikingly unfair.
Escalates into visceral allegory with an abandon and cruelty that seem positively Romanian. The last 30 minutes more than redeem the preceding two hours.
Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum
The title embraces the richness of Kechiche's beautiful film, which captures the rhythms of displacement and hardship, the bond of family meals, and even the daily routines of the magnificent women who are part of Slimane's life.
The Hollywood Reporter by Ray Bennett
A penchant for suffocating close-ups and an overabundance of scenes that go on far too long mar Abdellatif Kechiche's The Secret of the Grain, an otherwise engaging drama about an immigrant Arab family in France.
The Secret Of The Grain stretches out at the relaxed pace of a seven-course meal, but at the end of it, Kechiche has squeezed the most he can out of percolating dramas within the family and he lets the audience get to know its members without needing to throw them all a subplot.
The cast is solid, with standout performances by first-timer Habib Boufares as Slimane.