Pre-Release Screening
Algiers, 1938. Meursault, a quiet and unassuming employee in his early
thirties, attends his mother’s funeral without shedding a tear. The next day,
he begins a casual affair with Marie, a work colleague. He quickly slips
back into his usual routine. However, his daily life is about to be disrupted
by his neighbour who draw Meursault into his shady dealings, until one
blisteringly hot day, a tragic event occurs.
Benjamin Voisin’s perfectly plays the detached enigma and anti-hero of
Meursault, in a completely evocative of the world set by director Francois
Ozon. Beautifully shot on black and white, this tale incorporates both the
blistering heat and tension of Algiers, through the detachment of its
protagonist, and a civil justice campaign that completes its task in
railroading viewers into existential crisis.
One of Ozon’s richest and most satisfying works in years - that rarest of
literary adaptations, one that honours a foundational text precisely by
finding something new to say. The Wrap
French with English subtitles
Preview courtesy of Curzon Film