L'ange de goudron (2001) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Very Surprising!
Spuzzlightyear17 August 2005
Tar Angel is a surprisingly engaging little Canadian movie that I've never heard of before, yet I am usually up to date on these things.

An Algierian family are all set for the final step to becoming full fledged Canadians when all of a sudden, the son they thought they knew, turns out to have plenty of secrets up his sleeve. His father, in a desperate race to save his son, has to figure out which is more important.. His son, or his citizenship? So the father and his son's girlfriend take a Northern Quebec tour (woo fun) to find him and figure out what he's up to, which leads to a somewhat harsh conclusion.

Everything about this movie is great. The acting is surprisingly excellent, and is quite well done. The only big problem I had with this movie, is that there is this big hole in the middle, when the father and the son's girlfriend go off to try to find him, the subplot, if that is indeed what it was, was there to kill time, as the story suddenly drags, but once they do find him, it immediately picks up again.

Aside from that, and some minor plot holes that the script-writer was hoping you wouldn't find, this movie is a pretty good watching.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Other realities
Oreste9 October 2001
An Algerian immigrant, few days before receiving his papers to become a Canadian citizen finds out that his 19 years old son has erased all the data from government offices, as a terrorist action, and has disappeared somewhere in Northern Quebec.

With Huguette (his son's girlfriend, a tattoo artist), he leaves in a truck, "borrowed" to his former employer, for the Temiscamingue region where they try to convince this 19 years old revolutionnary not to destroy, with twenty guys, a bunch of passports.

Even if the terrorist underscore of the film sounds weak, it is a great motor of emotions beautifully delivered by the actors. Anger, compassion, love, all leading to a very touching - tear-pulling - ending for the movie, on an almost caricatural national anthem sung by immigrants.

This film is at the image of the new Québec cinema, new faces, new themes, new realities, a new form for the poetic languages, with it's strengths and weaknesses, with a great sense of reality, leaving enough space for the mind to travel.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Where is the plane going?
transint16 October 2006
One scene of the film shows a plane full of illegal immigrants that are being deported. Where is this plane supposed to land, as the people seem to be from everywhere: Asians, Africans, Arabs, etc. So one must wonder whether the plane is supposed to hop from continent to continent, discharging people along the way!

I have heard of a ''secret'' airport, formerly an airbase, in La Macaza, Quebec, serving for such a purpose. This might be an unfounded rumour, but sometimes rumours are based on reality. That doesn't change the fact that if such a plane were to take off with such a diverse group of people, it could not land in just one place.
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Black Wings.
anaconda-4065810 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Tar Angel (2001):Dir: Denis Chouinard / Cast: Zenedine Soualem, Catherine Trudeau, Rabah Ait Ouyahia, Hiam Abbass, Kenza Abiabdillah: Interesting examination regarding struggles from one culture to another. The title refers too a father who paves for a living and his son who is not the angel he brought him up to be. A family fled from Algeria and are about to obtain Canadian citizenship. Ahmed Kasmi learns that his son joined a group of militants and they broke into an immigration office and deleted information. The act was caught on security cameras and Kasmi hunts for his son on the streets of Montreal where he meets his son's ex-girlfriend. Interesting concept is quite detailed but the ending is a disappointment. Directed by Denis Chouinard who previously made Clandestins, which is also about immigrants fleeing from one place to another. Excellent performances from a superb foreign cast who pull out all the stops for flawless emotions that can rival their Hollywood counterparts. We can feel the desperation of a father out to locate his son and prevent further harm, and a mother who can do no more than await answers. We can relate to the rebellious nature of the son, and the girlfriend who cares enough to pull away. It states that a parent can only do so much but we cannot prevent disappointment nor dictate whether their choices will reflect ours. Score: 9 / 10
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed