User Reviews (14)

Add a Review

  • This is really a very remarkable film. Exploring the group dynamics of school children, director Laura Wandel has taken the radical choice of positioning her camera at children's height, registering only what children see. Adults are reduced to supporting roles, and they are only visible when they occupy themselves directly with Nora, the heroine of Un Monde, played amazingly by 9 year old Maya Vanderbeque.

    Not only the way Wandel shows us what children see makes this film special. The script is also very clever in explaining how the mechanics of bullying can really make young children desperate, and how it is almost impossible to find a solution using adult logic. It is almost a cliché to say that children can be very cruel, but this film shows why and how it happens.

    The almost documentary filming style, with lots of close-ups, is impressive. In one crucial scene, the camera focuses for several mintues on Nora's face, while she registers what's going on around her. The viewer hears what she hears, but sees only her face. The result is spectacular.

    This film can easily stand next to the other great documentary-style film about school life, 'Entre les murs'. That film was nominated for an Oscar. 'Un Monde' is the Belgian entry for the Oscar race. It deserves at least a nomination.
  • This movie is everything it have to be. The camerawork is really brilliant , the hand held camera gives uncomfortable feel throughout the movie. The performances by siblings is just brilliant throughout the movie they carry the burden of movie. The story is really very simple but detailed. Every moment seem to be important and not a repetition. And thus movie is very quick but slow it gives time to viewers to get to understand what's going on. To quickly summarise this movie is a must watch, thought provoking and not easy to forget.
  • A fine movie showing at the London Film festival. In the Belgium hard-htting tradition of the Dardenne's, with a hint of the great Alan Clarke's minimal shooting style. SHort and brutally honest. The director has an interesting voice...
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a very well made film. The child actors and actresses are incredibly naturalistic, and their performances couldn't possibly be any more amazing. I liked the way it was shot--from a child's point of view--and I do agree that some of the cruelty shown here is possible. However, even if everyone in this district was completely dense, I don't believe the events shown here could ever happen in this order in real life. While some children can be incredibly cruel, and trauma can affect people in many ways, this is just not an accurate depiction of human behavior. And it is not representative of the world according to children. I thought it was enjoyable, but for a film that tries to present itself as realistically as possible, the writing shows a lack of understanding of its subjects.
  • gsygsy19 January 2022
    I've never seen anything quite like this film before. It is so truthful it could easily pass for a documentary about the life of young schoolchildren. But it is also as skilful a piece of storytelling as any mainsteam movie. Above all, it contains within it an unspoken but ever-present warning that , unless we're careful, we can end up fighting playground battles all our lives.
  • A mundane subject given extra ordinary detailing and presented from a unique angle, slates story line impressive and compelling.

    Given the nature of content, story is of a serious nature and the kids have done exceptionally well to portray the roles to perfection.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Here was a popular book written in the late 1980s by Robert Fulghum named "All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten," It is filled with tried and true lessons about growing up: "Hold hands and stick together," "play fair," "look at yourself," and other snippets of suggestions we learn about early in life but rarely follow. There are other things we are taught in school, however, that will not appear in books but are a perfect fit for Laura Wandel's masterful first feature Playground (Un monde), Belgium's submission to the 2022 Oscars for Best International Film. Among the advice the film gives is - dominate to avoid domination, be right and make others wrong, never show weakness, and most adults you look to for caring are interested in their own problems, not yours.

    This advice was learned early by seven-year-old Nora in a remarkable first performance by Maya Vanderbeque, a shy and sensitive young girl struggling to fit into a rejecting environment in this deeply disturbing look at power relationships at a French grade school. Focusing on the environment where only the strongest or the most manipulative survive, Nora, who is fearfully left by her father (Karim Leklou, "The Stronghold") on her first day, has to navigate strict rules that one dares not break, rules where everyone has a place in the hierarchy and, if you don't know it, you will soon find out.

    The film is subtitled "Un monde" which translates into "the world," a reference to the fact that the playground is the only world that the viewer knows. Though it is a work of fiction, it feels like a documentary and may hit a responsive chord with those who have pushed away disturbing memories of their childhood. In this constraining environment, Nora's older brother Abel (Günter Duret, "Working Girls") is the subject of continuous bullying by other boys and who, because of his size and the number of aggressive bullies he has to deal with, is unable to defend himself from the relentless attacks and is too embarrassed to tell his father about the beatings.

    Cinematographer Frédéric Noirhomme ("A Good Doctor") shoots everything from the vantage point of the young children and we only see the adults as disembodied arms and legs when they stoop to speak to a child. Shot mostly in close-ups, the expressions on Nora's face reveal more than could ever be spoken: Her fear, hurt, longing for friendship, and the slow loss of her innocence. There is no narrative flow, merely a collection of episodes that repeat themselves but with increasing urgency. Unable to get through to school officials who show little personal interest, Nora, unable to continue to bear the secret of her brother's suffering, turns to her father who complains to school officials but achieves little beyond confronting the perpetrators obvious stonewalling.

    Abel now feels that his sister has committed an act of betrayal and their relationship suffers, Nora receiving the worst of it as the school bullies turn on her. In this dog-eat-dog world, it becomes apparent that the bullied ultimately becomes the bully to achieve some imagined payback. Reminiscent of Kazakhstan director Emir Baigazin's unforgettable "Harmony Lessons" in which a bullied student plots revenge on his tormentors, Playground is not an easy watch, yet it is a haunting and lyrical film that, even in its bleakest moments, conveys an unmistakable experience of light, a film that, while it mirrors an increasing cycle of violence in a society governed by the false notion of survival of the fittest, love remains present, buried but always ready to emerge.
  • Um pø that is, a film angling the subjective feeling of sociodynamical motions and emotions in a smallschool environment, where we follow ''little'' Nora and her older brother, a boy thats being ultimately seriously bad bullied by senior school mates. We are experiencing the intricate connections between teacxhervs pupil, pupil vs parent and pupil vs pupil and contra versa. It gives you a strange feeling of''have i felt these feelings before''?

    I, myself many many years ago, did not have trouble in my own class but where bullied alot by 6th graders due to speaking the wrong dialect at school,i also did not have any of my brothers in the schoolyard to protect me.therefore i slung on the sleeves of the guardian teachers for at least 2 years, and had that eartshattering moment when my headteacher took another job, i cried and cried for days that summer holiday. When returning to school in the fall though i had gained alot more strength and physique due to loads of swimming sessions, coached by my uncle, that made me more sturdy mentally and quite a match for those trying to push me over, so when i marked my spot as mine with shear muscle use i had most of the time a nice life in the small and middle school age, so i survived.

    So i fell into reminiscence when viewing these kids. And the kids acting is just phenomenal, nora is top, and leads you through everything with might. I must admit that i had totally forgotten how noisy the schoolyard was way back then.

    Productionwise i have only one small flaw noted, and that leads to more admiration to the children acting, because the ever and forever close facial shooting angles mustve been a pest for them small ones.i can agree the share of focus, but not as much as here where you almost feel and taste the smell of sweat and tears.so a little less blurred out backgrounds next time. A recommend to all teachers and parents that has a gutfeeling that everything isnt allright, from the grumpy old man.
  • Bullying has become a big subject in the last 20 years, but this film tells a great story from the perspective of two children who are each victims of it. With the Dardenne brothers and others, the Belgians have redefined the social landscape of Italian neorealism.
  • broessanders17 October 2021
    An interesting movie about the complexity of the world how children experience it. I loved the camera's point of view, constantly on the height of the children.
  • Bullying is such a tricky difficult issue to solve especially among kids. It's complicated not only because it's hard to discover if some kid is objected and suffers from it among his collogues but also because the subjected can easily transform into the new bully as an act of respond by transforming the anger into violence, and that is what PLAYGROUND portrayed effectively and painfully here.
  • This is a gritty story about the sociology of a school playground. It's also an account of love. Do you remember your school playground? How did we get out alive?
  • Yes, forget Nicolas Philibert's ETRE ET AVOIR, made in 2002, a documentary about young eight or ten years old kids in school, and the moving relationship with their teacher. This one is not a documentary, it's a real movie but actually made more or less in a documentary style, but beware. It is painful, disturbing to watch, because about bullying, psychological and physical harassment, torture, pulled by children towards other children. It is awful, disgusting, especially because of the contrast between the tenderness of some scenes and others absolutely unbearable, such as this one, when we see some kids putting the face of one of their class mates in a toilet bidet. I saw such sequences in war films and Gestapo torture sessions. It is a film about cruelty, the most gruesome cruelty, because without any reason. It is very hard to watch for those who lived such things or for those who have kids who commited suicide, thanks to their school mates torturers, class mates hangmen, exectioners. Shame on them and thanks to this beautiful and unavoidable little film which offers the peculiarity to have no music at all.
  • I think this is our first Belgian film - in fact it even might be our first Belgian anything! I know this exists but that's as far as it goes for me - I'm assuming at least some of it is set in a playground.

    Yup - a playground is definitely involved. We basically follow Nora around as she starts school - unsure at first, but slowly gaining confidence and friends as she finds her feet. Unfortunately, her older brother Abel isn't having a great time of it with bullies and Nora's sense of injustice is fired up. But her best efforts to fix things, unsurprisingly, don't have the desired effect. It's all far too believable and at times you do despair, but it does manage to come up with a good ending which doesn't tie things up nicely but does offer some hope.

    The film REALLY focuses on Nora so it's going to live or die on Maya Vanderbeque's performance and, as The Guardian says, she is indeed brilliant in this - it would be an impressive performance at any age and she absolutely nails it. Günter Duret is also good as Abel (her brother) in a pretty unflattering role, with him and Maya displaying many aspects of a sibling relationship well. Also worth of a mention are Karim Leklou as her dad (who Wikipedia tells me is named Finnegan for no obvious reason) and Laura Verlinden as Mme Agnes (her teacher) who portray different aspects of adult helplessness - but my major take away was that her dad really should have taught her to tie her laces before she went to school!

    The film captures the randomness and unfairness of bullying accurately and the (sometimes unintentional) cruelty of children, but also the innocence and joy of play. It's also absolutely heartbreaking at times - from the perspective of the children, the parents and the teachers because there's obviously no easy answer to these things. And, as The Guardian says, it is indeed a short, intense film - 72 minutes!

    The film's direction (Laura Wandel, with her debut) is well thought out with most of the film taking place at Nora's level which is very effective (we either only see the waistline of adults or they have to bend down to join the shot) and the use of sound is also impressive with random school noises contrasting well with some very effective silence or whispers. It's also interesting that French title is "a world" because it really gives you impression that school is Nora's world.

    I really liked this film - it's well put together and really pulls at your emotions with a stunning central performance (and there's no absolutely no danger of it outstaying its welcome). So it's a strong recommendation from me - at time of writing it's available to rent in all the usual places.