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THE SPECIALS (HORSE NORMES)
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Opening a door into the world of teenagers and young adults who are profoundly autistic, The Specials is clearly a personal film, made through Toledano and Nakache's real-life friendship with its subjects, two indefatigable suppliers of round-the-clock care for those the system has rejected. The Specials will now sit back and wait for a late-October release in France and, presumably, an awards run. Closing credits indicate that 5 percent of the profits Gaumont makes on this picture will go directly to the two companies featured, which should boost support.
The Specials is a rare film that comes both from the heart and reality: it's a potent mix which allows access to a hidden subject yet welcomes the audience in with grace and humour. Toledano and Nakache have the maturity and the success as film-makers now to attack this difficult material with a typically light-handed touch - it hits hard, but The Specials is certainly no ordeal to watch. Brisk editing, a dose of good cheer, a lot of information and precision character development cuts through the tough subject matter. Vincent Cassel delivers one of his best performances in years as Bruno, who has given his life over to the company he has founded to care for autistic children and adolescents. Reda Kateb is his ally, Malik, who runs "Le Relais IDF" which trains up youngsters from deprived areas to be their carers.
Both are, clearly, real. Bruno is based on Stephane Benhamou, who Toledano and Nakache first met 25 years ago and who has cared for an autistic member of Toledano's own family. Malik is Daoud Tatou, who the film-makers first encountered when they made a short film trying to raise funds for Stephane. Four years ago Toledano and Nakache made a 26-minute TV documentary on this odd couple - one a Jew, the other a Muslim - called We Should Make A Film About It. And now they have. The inciting incident is a real-life official investigation which took place in 2017 and threatened to shut down Stephane's unlicensed organisation, "Le Silence des Justes", but a lot of the film feels free-flow.
By Fionnuala Halligan. SCREEN DAILY
https://www.screendaily.com/reviews/the-specials-cannes-review/5139917.article
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