Samba

Samba

By Oliver Nakache & Eric Toledano

  • Genre: Foreign
  • Release Date: 2015-06-24
  • Advisory Rating: R
  • Runtime: 1h 59min
  • Director: Oliver Nakache & Eric Toledano
  • Production Company: Ten Films
  • Production Country: France
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
6.338/10
6.338
From 936 Ratings

Description

From the acclaimed directing duo of Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano (The Intouchables), Samba is the richly entertaining chronicle of an undocumented kitchen worker battling deportation from his adopted home in Paris. For ten years, Senegalese immigrant Samba (Omar Sy – winner of the 2012 César Award for Best Actor) has stayed under the government radar, taking menial kitchen jobs in the hope of becoming a professional chef. Suddenly, as his longtime ambitions for a better life seem just within reach, immigration authorities hit Samba with an order to leave France immediately. Stubbornly holding onto his dream, Samba pins his hopes for a reprieve on a local immigration advocacy center and Alice (Charlotte Gainsbourg), an emotionally vulnerable volunteer with little experience, but plenty of heart. He finds a second home at the center with Alice and her colleagues, including brusque law student Manu (Izïa Higelin), do-gooder Marcelle (Hélène Vincent) and naïve Maggy (Jacqueline Jehanneuf), as they search for a way for him to stay in France. As Samba plunges into the unpredictable world of transient labor, guided by his fun-loving Brazilian buddy Wilson (Tahar Rahim), Alice finds herself deeply moved by his determination. Still trying to put her own life back together after a stress-related breakdown, she takes Samba under her wing, while trying to ignore the growing attraction she feels for him. As the immigrant and the burned-out corporate executive tentatively draw closer, their unlikely cross-cultural connection gives them each the courage to reinvent themselves in this vibrant romantic comedy full of tender humor and heartfelt optimism.

Trailer

Photos

Reviews

  • Amazingly well acted

    4
    By la vache qui rit pas
    It is almost scary how well and believable Charlotte Gainsbourg acts fragile and insecure charity worker/femme d'affaires in this film. Omar Sy is equally believable, shedding himself of the happy go lucky type he was in The Intouchables. The acting is what pulls the film through. The script, unfortunately, can't stay away from the very French "and now it's time for a feel good party seen" that falls out of the sky. Not very likely to have this collection of characters all come together like this. Equally, a few other plot points could have been left out and a smoother wrap up of the story could have been found. Everything falls into place in the last 20 minutes. On me it had the opposite effect of what is supposed to be a fuzzy happy ending. The filmmakers simply couldn't resist when they should have known better. Still worth watching for the acting.

keyboard_arrow_up