Nestor, Lei, Pierrette, Mohamed, Hafida, Marius, Marc, Galina, Genady, Mike and Lala: through their presence, _Le temps qu’il fait_ weaves a mosaic of stories in which dreams and disappointments, hopes and worries intertwine with the life that is before them. In counterpoint, there are these new landscapes of financial centers, abandoned industrial spaces and wasteland from which we hear the echo of speeches that call to take the train of the new economy. By their simple attachment to a profession which gives them a living, the men and women of the film put up resistance to these slogans. Little by little, a radical rupture is emerging between economic thought and the movement of life. A break that shapes the present time.
Director | Sylvain L'Espérance |
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Le temps qu’il fait is like a patchwork documentary, stitched through with nuances and contrasts, that draws us in gently, despite the violence of the systems it denounces. By placing those rejected by society at the center of the story, those for whom the system has nothing to offer, Sylvain L’Espérance lays bare the dehumanizing dead-ends of ambient capitalism.
With its alternating interviews, conversations and workplace observations, the film shows us the insecurities, worries, humiliations, but also the small forms of resistance of people who live in precarity on a daily basis and fight to live with dignity: immigrants, on-call workers, buskers, the unemployed…everyone who lives at the end of the line and is dealt the blows of a system founded on destruction and injustice. A distressing situation that, in the years elapsed between this film’s release and the present day, have only gotten worse.
Jason Burnham
Tënk's programming assistant
Le temps qu’il fait is like a patchwork documentary, stitched through with nuances and contrasts, that draws us in gently, despite the violence of the systems it denounces. By placing those rejected by society at the center of the story, those for whom the system has nothing to offer, Sylvain L’Espérance lays bare the dehumanizing dead-ends of ambient capitalism.
With its alternating interviews, conversations and workplace observations, the film shows us the insecurities, worries, humiliations, but also the small forms of resistance of people who live in precarity on a daily basis and fight to live with dignity: immigrants, on-call workers, buskers, the unemployed…everyone who lives at the end of the line and is dealt the blows of a system founded on destruction and injustice. A distressing situation that, in the years elapsed between this film’s release and the present day, have only gotten worse.
Jason Burnham
Tënk's programming assistant
FR- Le temps qu'il fait