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Polisse (2011)
9/10
Funny, tragic and gripping
5 January 2013
Polisse is a difficult film to define. Based on real-life cases dealt with by the Child Protection Unit covering the 19th arrondissement (borough or quarter) of Paris, it could possibly be called a docudrama, although it does not cover events of historical significance.

Maïwenn, who wrote, directed and featured in the film as a photojournalist shadowing the unit, spent time herself with such a unit for research. All the cases featured in the film are supposed to have taken place while she was there or were recounted to her at that time. It is this that gives the film its lifelike, gritty quality. Indeed, the first scene plunges straight into an interview with a little girl who claims her father is molesting her, and is swiftly followed by other similar interviews with suspected paedophiles, victims and accusers. Despite the obviously very serious subject of the film, humorous moments pepper the script, which successfully highlights the tragicomic ludicrousness of some of the situations they encounter.

Alongside the cases of child molesting and underage rape that the team deals with on a day- to-day basis, the film delves into the complex personalities of the characters, who are at times tender and patient, and at others frustrated, angry and even violent. We are privy to the emotional strain the job has on these police officers and the effects on their personal lives, their marriages and relationships with their children. Special bonds also develop between them, and their intimacy and affinity is so well portrayed that it is easy to forget that this is in fact a film and not simply a documentary.

Though Polisse, like real life, does not really follow a plot line, and we never find out if the criminals are actually brought to justice, one does not become bored or frustrated or ever wonder where the film is going. In fact, just like the TV series The Wire to which it has been compared, it is the lack of obvious direction of the film that ultimately makes it all the more powerful and effective.
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1/10
Bad!
16 December 2012
Really quite boring and at times so bad it was funny! Full of clichés; really nothing original about it. Radcliffe was quite wooden. He doesn't seem to have a very big repertoire of expressions. I nearly didn't bother finishing watching the movie and the ending didn't make it particularly worthwhile hanging on. I'll admit I am not really into Gothic, scary movies, so perhaps it was my mistake to rent this DVD. But seeing as this is supposed to be a bit of a classic and it has been on as a play in the West End in London, I expected it to be worth watching. However, I wouldn't waste my time if I were you, unless you want to have a bit of a giggle, which I'm sure wasn't the intention when this movie was made...!
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