Your Company
 

24 Days(24 Jours)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

France · 2014
1h 50m
Director Alexandre Arcady
Starring Zabou Breitman, Pascal Elbé, Jacques Gamblin, Sylvie Testud
Genre Drama, Thriller

While Ilan Halimi is kidnapped and tortured over 24 days, his family and the police race against time to save him. Based on the book co-written by Ilan's mother, Alexandre Arcady's cinematic adaptation offers insight into his vicious ordeal and the harrowing experience of his family waiting and hoping the police would save their son.

Stream 24 Days

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

67

The A.V. Club by

24 Days is neither subtle nor particularly sophisticated as filmmaking, but its refusal to reduce lived reality to generic tropes is admirable.

90

Los Angeles Times by Betsy Sharkey

Knowing the outcome behind the true-life tragedy 24 Days doesn't diffuse the horror, the tension or the sadness of watching one family's drama unfold day after agonizing day when a son is kidnapped and hope dies.

75

RogerEbert.com by Glenn Kenny

The movie, starring Zabou Breitman, Jacque Gamblin, Pascal Elbé, Sylvie Testud, and Tony Harrisson, has a more upsetting dimension than most suspense dramas as it’s based on a true story, a story that touches on issues still roiling France today.

50

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Mr. Arcady’s reliance on heavy-handed melodrama, on screaming women and on worried-looking men, winds everything so tightly that the anguish plateaus and the characters begin to seem like chess pieces in an argument.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Jordan Mintzer

The film is not always subtle in its portrayal of a family ripped apart by tragedy, but remains captivating as a pure procedural that raises questions about the Paris police's handling of such situations, as well as about the state of race relations in contemporary France.

50

The Dissolve by Mike D'Angelo

Despite strenuous efforts, 24 Days fails to make the case that Halimi would be alive now had the anti-Semitism of his abductors been properly recognized. And since that’s the film’s sole reason for existence, there’s not much else to say.

63

Boston Globe by Peter Keough

As a suspenseful true crime story, 24 Days succeeds. As a warning against the ever present dangers of anti-Semitism, it is eloquent and disturbing. It’s in combining the two that Arcady mishandles the case.

50

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

The performances are engrossing — especially Harrisson as the short-tempered African Muslim. But veteran director Alexandre Arcady (“Last Summer in Tangiers,” “Hold Up”) seems more concerned with the message and moral lesson here than with suspense.

Users who liked this film also liked