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‘Meet the Barbarians’ Review – Julie Delpy’s French Comedy Is Full of Heart

Sep 23, 2024

The promise of a French social satire that delves into Gallic xenophobia and a global refugee crisis does not, unfortunately, seem like something that might gather wide audience interest. However, if you add in the fact that Meet the Barbarians (Les barbares in French) is helmed by July Delpy, an icon of French cinema and co-star of Richard Linklater’s Before trilogy, perhaps more would have their interest piqued. Set in a picturesque small town in France’s Brittany region, this tale of life in Paimpont has moments of gentle humor, a dash of romance, and a whole lot of political commentary.

What Is ‘Meet the Barbarians’ About?
Image Via Le Pacte

The sleepy town of Paimpont feels a world away from the affairs of the outside world, but its bucolic, cloistered space is shattered in part thanks to the eager desire of the town’s schoolteacher, Joëlle (Delpy), who, along with the encouragement of the Mayor (Jean-Charles Clichet), arranges to welcome some Ukrainians into their midst. “Proudly raising the blue and yellow Ukrainian flag, they’re joined by townsfolk including Anne (Sandrine Kiberlain), a local shopkeeper and long-time friend of Joëlle, and councilor and local plumber Hervé (Laurent Lafitte), a man of Alsatian origin who nonetheless claims Bretonian identity with a discomfiting fervor who nonetheless reluctantly voted to accept the original slate of newcomers.

Just before their arrival, they’re informed that all Ukrainians have found placement elsewhere in the country and that instead, they are to receive a group from Syria. The family, traumatized from their journey and anxious to make sense of their new surroundings, is soon plunged into a community unsure of their previously committed generosity and neighborliness. With strong performances by other members of the ensemble, including Ziad Barkri, Dalia Naous, and Rita Hayek, this gentle yet powerful story about integration, acceptance, and overcoming ignorance plays out in both entertaining and effective ways. The fundamentals of culture, from food to faith to family, are all interrogated within what otherwise is quite a breezy, accessible storyline.

Julie Delpy Shines as Both Director and Actor
Image Via Le Pacte

Delpy is effortlessly engaging as always, playing the earnest but often gormless teacher with a gleeful sense of plausibility. The film itself is a kind of family affair, with Delpy’s father, Albert, playing a wonderfully off-beat local farmer who in earlier times would have been the gap-toothed coot in a John Ford film. Mathieu Demy, son of Jacques Demy and Agnès Varda, manages to be smoldering while the rest of the group all feel believable in this somewhat heightened story of small-town life. Rather than coming across as didactic or cloying, Delpy manages to satirize the closed-mindedness of the citizenry while also recognizing the at times self-destructive zeal of those in over their heads. The Syrian characters themselves are played with dimension as well, recognizing that within their own community, there are wounds not so easily healed, and betrayals not so easily forgotten.

Prejudice knows no borders, of course, and time after time, the film manages to raise the obvious, only to allow the more subtle and transformative moment to have the final say. What we’re treated to, then, is a light, entertaining, but also quite timely look at how we must all check our assumptions and work hard to overcome key biases, no matter where we’re from. Rather than merely a bunch of bumpkins bounding around, the predilections of the residents of Paimpont are far more universal in just about any environment, in just about any locale. The film raises deep questions that are handled with subtlety and aplomb, with a droll comedy where we’re laughing at our own fallibilities as much as those we see struggling on screen. Meet the Barbarians provides a light yet engaging look into how communities are built and maintained, and how differing aspects of their identities can form something better when people of disparate backgrounds are brought together.

Meet the Barbarians had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
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