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La Haine 
Jonathan Skewes, Elizabeth DeBerardinis, 
Beate Aguayo, and Kathy Ma
In the opening scene, there are a lot of people running around, going from 
store to store to break things, breaking public property, some try to fight 
another, there were things burning on the street. There were many police try 
to stop them, and got injured. 
The music played in the opening scene was Burnin’ and Lootin by Bob 
Marley, and the song sends the message that people need to stands up for 
their rights. The government was taking advantage of the poor, and only 
helping the rich The introduction music remind me of some events in French 
history, where lower class people did not get treated fairly, there were 
farmers who work at the farm but did not get to own the land. They always 
have to pay taxes and rent.
According to the author of one blog, Cinéma Engagé is 
designed to give unjust systems, like the police in La Haine, a 
bad name. Fiomakers choose this type of work to defend 
minorities. An example of this is how the public were amazed 
to see what life was like in les banlieues. They saw how violent 
the police acted towards the people. The movie caused a lot of 
talk as well because of its controversial subject matter and 
how the police were represented as violent and racist. 
(Article cited written by Charlotte Harel, Helena Rodriguez, 
and Margaux Le Roy)
The director of La Haine, Mathieu Kassovitz, put the movie in black and 
white for many reasons. It was originally shot in color and then he made it 
into black and white. I think it really helps to set the mood of the movie to 
give it a cold harsh feeling, which goes with the violence. The police try to 
control the people through violence and abuse their power. The use of black 
and white also expresses the idea of accepting a situation that you are given 
and having to deal with it. It does this by linking the real footage from the 
news reports that we watch in the beginning of the movie in the opening 
credits. Lastly, I think the use of black and white cinematography makes the 
movie seem like a documentary (Turner) . It makes people feel like they are 
learning about life in the banlieues. The main feeling that was generated 
throughout this movie was resentment to the police, and this was also 
generated by the use of black and white imagery. Black and white are polar 
opposites, so the director used this to show the stark differences between 
the citizens of the banlieues and the police.
Two of the three main characters didn’t have true 
hatred for the police, and one of them, Hubert, said 
that they were they to protect them. However, the 
two characters who don’t hate the police are 
victims of police brutality. This changes their views 
on the police because now they have experienced 
police brutality.
There still are racial tensions and conflicts that characterize French society 
today. One article that I found that talked about recent police brutality was 
about how an anti-police protest turned very violent in the city of Rennes. 
The youth wore masks to protect their identity. Protesters became 
extremely violent in response to the death of a 21 year old activist Remi 
Fraisse. He was killed during an explosion that occurred when brutal 
clashes with police broke out at the site of contested-dam project in 
southwestern France. The protesters reacted by hurling flairs at police and 
even flipping cars over. The police fired tear gas at the protesters. This riot 
also put pressure on the government. This article is just one example of 
how conflicts with police still occur in French Society today. We can also 
see strong ties from this article to the movie La Haine, because we see 
how poorly the police treat their people in the riots . 
http://rt.com/news/201179-france-activist-death-clashes/
Vinz 
• Jewish 
• Wants revenge on police 
• Represents the upset 
people in the banlieues
Hubert 
• Afro-French 
• Boxer 
• Mature 
• Pro police, but once he is a victim 
of police brutality, his views of 
the police change 
• Believes that as long as the youth 
disrespect the police, the police 
will disrespect the youth
Saïd 
• Represents the North 
African, Muslim population 
• Young 
• Sidekick 
• Gets the group in trouble 
with a wealthy guy in 
downtown Paris
According to Erin Schroeder, the banlieues are a predominantly working-class 
industrial suburb of Paris. These working-class industrial suburbs are made up 
of numerous immigrant cultures which create an incredibly diverse population 
as well as various national problems. As we saw in La Haine, each of the three 
main characters has significantly different cultural backgrounds which causes 
them to have different views regarding the situation with the police. While the 
three boys have differing views on how to deal with the police because of what 
happened to Abdel, the three all seem to have a consensus regarding their 
disposition towards authority figures. There is an obvious lack of respect 
between the youth and the police in these industrial suburbs. As Schroeder 
says, “In the contemporary context, unemployment is high, housing is 
crumbling, and periodic bursts of youth protest lead the national government to 
prescribe an almost permanent riot police presence in the most explosive or 
"hot" neighborhoods (les quartiers chauds)”.
The movie utilizes the expression “a zoo you visit in your car” in reference to the 
banlieues. This expression is used to illustrate the way which these working-class 
suburbs are almost completely cut off from any association or connection with central 
Paris. Because the banlieues are so effectively cut off from the outside world, they are 
somewhat enclosed in their own world and as a result have created walls which 
separate this world from the rest of Paris. This separation has allowed the rest of Paris 
look at the banlieues and the people that live there as one would look at animals in a 
zoo. These working-class suburbs are merely a spectacle for the rest of Paris to gawk 
at when driving by. Amy Siciliano, from the University of Toronto describes how the 
camera positioning in La Haine contributes to the overall illustration of how the rest 
of Paris views people from the banlieues, “We observe the youths’ hostile interactions 
with the crew; their relative position to them in a playground below ground level; 
their projected image, which oscillates between the view of the La Haine: Framing 
the ‘Urban Outcasts’ 224 cinematographer and the cameraman; and ultimately how 
the youth themselves are acutely aware of their ‘safari-like’ appearance” (Siciliano, 
Amy).
La Haine portrays the banlieues as an area of dilapidated apartment buildings with 
graffiti on almost every wall. Youth cover the streets as the majority of them are 
outside playing, walking, meeting friends, selling and buying drugs, etc. The youth 
which fill the streets of the banlieues are clearly not children of wealth. Most of them 
are wearing simple clothing that looks worn out. The jungle gyms which we see Vinz, 
Hubert, and Said hangout at are not updated, clean or even safe looking. Every single 
detail of the banlieues is depressing and illustrates the government’s lack of concern 
for this area of Paris. Adele Chapman, successfully describes the way in which the 
film depicts the banlieues in an article for Entertainment Scene 360, “The whole 
estate looks dirty because of the high volume of graffiti on almost everything. There 
are lots of high rise flats, which house lots of people, but each flat is small. The 
banlieue looks very small and claustrophobic, almost prison like” (Chapman, Adele).
The final scene was inevitable. At the end, there was a man driving a car and 
approaching the three main characters. He had a light flashing on top of his 
car, so he could be a policeman, but he was not in uniform. He killed Vinz and 
wanted to kill another character. Hubert was closing his eyes, which sows he 
could already see how the scene is going to play out. The best illustration of 
the relationship between youth and police in the banlieues is this scene. Phillip 
Cartelli explains this relationship in his review of La Haine by saying, “The 
shocking eruption of violence that ends the film serves as both a warning, and 
documentation of the pressures to which those on all sides of banlieue life are 
subjected”.
Sources 
• Cartelli, Phillip. "La Haine (1995) France." Rev. of Film. Film International 2008: 62-64. Print. 
• Chapman, Adele. "Movie Analysis the Representation of the Banlieue in La Haine." Entertainment Scene 360. N.p., 18 June 2007. Web. 23 
Oct. 2014. http://www.entertainmentscene360.com/index.php/movie-analysis-the-representation-of-the-banlieue-in-la-haine-43462/. 
• Harel, Charlotte, Helena Rodriguez, and Margaux Le Roy. "Le Cinéma Engagé : TPE 1ES3." Le Cinéma Engagé : TPE 1ES3. N.p., Jan. 2011. 
Web. 21 Nov. 2014. http://cinema-engage.blogspot.com/. 
• Morrisey, Jim. Je t’aime—moi non plus; Franco-British cinematic relations. New York: Berghahn Books, 2010. Print. 
• Schroeder, Erin. “A Multicultural Conversation: La Haine, Raï, and Menace II Society.” Camera Obscura 16.1 (2001): 143-179. Web. 23 Oct. 
2014. 
• Siciliano, Amy. La Haine. Harlow: Longman, 2000. ACME Editorial Collective, 2007. Web. 23 Oct. 2014. http://www.acme-journal. 
org/vol6/ASi.pdf. 
• Turner, Pete. "La Haine." STATIC MASS EMPORIUM RSS. METATEMPUS, 30 Nov. 2012. Web. 24 Oct. 2014. 
http://staticmass.net/deconstructing-cinema/la-haine/. 
• West, M Joan. “La Haine.” Cinéaste. 33.1 (2007): 76-77. Web 24 Oct. 2014. 
• Photo of Vinz taken from Dr. Guy Spielmann’s blog titled France: Culture banlieues. He works at Georgetown University. 
http://faculty.georgetown.edu/spielmag/docs/france/LaHaine.htm. 
• Photo of Hubert taken from shipintv.com. Article published by Grinchu on July 15, 2013. Article titled Hubert Koundé. 
http://shpintv.com/hubert-kounde/ 
• Photo of Saïd taken from an article titled France/Benin/Morocco: Jodie Foster on "La Haine”. Published on September 7, 2009 for bombastic 
element. http://www.bombasticelement.org/2009/09/francebeninmorocco-jodie-foster-on-la.html 
• Screenshots of les banlieues, the train, and the police brutality scene all taken from Blu-ray.com. The article was written on May 8, 2012, and 
it’s titled La Haine Blue-ray. http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/La-Haine-Blu-ray/38677/#Screenshots. 
• Photo of final scene taken from minineyes’s tumblr blog. Posted three months ago. http://minineyes.tumblr.com

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La Haine

  • 1. La Haine Jonathan Skewes, Elizabeth DeBerardinis, Beate Aguayo, and Kathy Ma
  • 2. In the opening scene, there are a lot of people running around, going from store to store to break things, breaking public property, some try to fight another, there were things burning on the street. There were many police try to stop them, and got injured. The music played in the opening scene was Burnin’ and Lootin by Bob Marley, and the song sends the message that people need to stands up for their rights. The government was taking advantage of the poor, and only helping the rich The introduction music remind me of some events in French history, where lower class people did not get treated fairly, there were farmers who work at the farm but did not get to own the land. They always have to pay taxes and rent.
  • 3. According to the author of one blog, Cinéma Engagé is designed to give unjust systems, like the police in La Haine, a bad name. Fiomakers choose this type of work to defend minorities. An example of this is how the public were amazed to see what life was like in les banlieues. They saw how violent the police acted towards the people. The movie caused a lot of talk as well because of its controversial subject matter and how the police were represented as violent and racist. (Article cited written by Charlotte Harel, Helena Rodriguez, and Margaux Le Roy)
  • 4. The director of La Haine, Mathieu Kassovitz, put the movie in black and white for many reasons. It was originally shot in color and then he made it into black and white. I think it really helps to set the mood of the movie to give it a cold harsh feeling, which goes with the violence. The police try to control the people through violence and abuse their power. The use of black and white also expresses the idea of accepting a situation that you are given and having to deal with it. It does this by linking the real footage from the news reports that we watch in the beginning of the movie in the opening credits. Lastly, I think the use of black and white cinematography makes the movie seem like a documentary (Turner) . It makes people feel like they are learning about life in the banlieues. The main feeling that was generated throughout this movie was resentment to the police, and this was also generated by the use of black and white imagery. Black and white are polar opposites, so the director used this to show the stark differences between the citizens of the banlieues and the police.
  • 5. Two of the three main characters didn’t have true hatred for the police, and one of them, Hubert, said that they were they to protect them. However, the two characters who don’t hate the police are victims of police brutality. This changes their views on the police because now they have experienced police brutality.
  • 6. There still are racial tensions and conflicts that characterize French society today. One article that I found that talked about recent police brutality was about how an anti-police protest turned very violent in the city of Rennes. The youth wore masks to protect their identity. Protesters became extremely violent in response to the death of a 21 year old activist Remi Fraisse. He was killed during an explosion that occurred when brutal clashes with police broke out at the site of contested-dam project in southwestern France. The protesters reacted by hurling flairs at police and even flipping cars over. The police fired tear gas at the protesters. This riot also put pressure on the government. This article is just one example of how conflicts with police still occur in French Society today. We can also see strong ties from this article to the movie La Haine, because we see how poorly the police treat their people in the riots . http://rt.com/news/201179-france-activist-death-clashes/
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  • 8. Vinz • Jewish • Wants revenge on police • Represents the upset people in the banlieues
  • 9. Hubert • Afro-French • Boxer • Mature • Pro police, but once he is a victim of police brutality, his views of the police change • Believes that as long as the youth disrespect the police, the police will disrespect the youth
  • 10. Saïd • Represents the North African, Muslim population • Young • Sidekick • Gets the group in trouble with a wealthy guy in downtown Paris
  • 11. According to Erin Schroeder, the banlieues are a predominantly working-class industrial suburb of Paris. These working-class industrial suburbs are made up of numerous immigrant cultures which create an incredibly diverse population as well as various national problems. As we saw in La Haine, each of the three main characters has significantly different cultural backgrounds which causes them to have different views regarding the situation with the police. While the three boys have differing views on how to deal with the police because of what happened to Abdel, the three all seem to have a consensus regarding their disposition towards authority figures. There is an obvious lack of respect between the youth and the police in these industrial suburbs. As Schroeder says, “In the contemporary context, unemployment is high, housing is crumbling, and periodic bursts of youth protest lead the national government to prescribe an almost permanent riot police presence in the most explosive or "hot" neighborhoods (les quartiers chauds)”.
  • 12. The movie utilizes the expression “a zoo you visit in your car” in reference to the banlieues. This expression is used to illustrate the way which these working-class suburbs are almost completely cut off from any association or connection with central Paris. Because the banlieues are so effectively cut off from the outside world, they are somewhat enclosed in their own world and as a result have created walls which separate this world from the rest of Paris. This separation has allowed the rest of Paris look at the banlieues and the people that live there as one would look at animals in a zoo. These working-class suburbs are merely a spectacle for the rest of Paris to gawk at when driving by. Amy Siciliano, from the University of Toronto describes how the camera positioning in La Haine contributes to the overall illustration of how the rest of Paris views people from the banlieues, “We observe the youths’ hostile interactions with the crew; their relative position to them in a playground below ground level; their projected image, which oscillates between the view of the La Haine: Framing the ‘Urban Outcasts’ 224 cinematographer and the cameraman; and ultimately how the youth themselves are acutely aware of their ‘safari-like’ appearance” (Siciliano, Amy).
  • 13. La Haine portrays the banlieues as an area of dilapidated apartment buildings with graffiti on almost every wall. Youth cover the streets as the majority of them are outside playing, walking, meeting friends, selling and buying drugs, etc. The youth which fill the streets of the banlieues are clearly not children of wealth. Most of them are wearing simple clothing that looks worn out. The jungle gyms which we see Vinz, Hubert, and Said hangout at are not updated, clean or even safe looking. Every single detail of the banlieues is depressing and illustrates the government’s lack of concern for this area of Paris. Adele Chapman, successfully describes the way in which the film depicts the banlieues in an article for Entertainment Scene 360, “The whole estate looks dirty because of the high volume of graffiti on almost everything. There are lots of high rise flats, which house lots of people, but each flat is small. The banlieue looks very small and claustrophobic, almost prison like” (Chapman, Adele).
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  • 16. The final scene was inevitable. At the end, there was a man driving a car and approaching the three main characters. He had a light flashing on top of his car, so he could be a policeman, but he was not in uniform. He killed Vinz and wanted to kill another character. Hubert was closing his eyes, which sows he could already see how the scene is going to play out. The best illustration of the relationship between youth and police in the banlieues is this scene. Phillip Cartelli explains this relationship in his review of La Haine by saying, “The shocking eruption of violence that ends the film serves as both a warning, and documentation of the pressures to which those on all sides of banlieue life are subjected”.
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  • 18. Sources • Cartelli, Phillip. "La Haine (1995) France." Rev. of Film. Film International 2008: 62-64. Print. • Chapman, Adele. "Movie Analysis the Representation of the Banlieue in La Haine." Entertainment Scene 360. N.p., 18 June 2007. Web. 23 Oct. 2014. http://www.entertainmentscene360.com/index.php/movie-analysis-the-representation-of-the-banlieue-in-la-haine-43462/. • Harel, Charlotte, Helena Rodriguez, and Margaux Le Roy. "Le Cinéma Engagé : TPE 1ES3." Le Cinéma Engagé : TPE 1ES3. N.p., Jan. 2011. Web. 21 Nov. 2014. http://cinema-engage.blogspot.com/. • Morrisey, Jim. Je t’aime—moi non plus; Franco-British cinematic relations. New York: Berghahn Books, 2010. Print. • Schroeder, Erin. “A Multicultural Conversation: La Haine, Raï, and Menace II Society.” Camera Obscura 16.1 (2001): 143-179. Web. 23 Oct. 2014. • Siciliano, Amy. La Haine. Harlow: Longman, 2000. ACME Editorial Collective, 2007. Web. 23 Oct. 2014. http://www.acme-journal. org/vol6/ASi.pdf. • Turner, Pete. "La Haine." STATIC MASS EMPORIUM RSS. METATEMPUS, 30 Nov. 2012. Web. 24 Oct. 2014. http://staticmass.net/deconstructing-cinema/la-haine/. • West, M Joan. “La Haine.” Cinéaste. 33.1 (2007): 76-77. Web 24 Oct. 2014. • Photo of Vinz taken from Dr. Guy Spielmann’s blog titled France: Culture banlieues. He works at Georgetown University. http://faculty.georgetown.edu/spielmag/docs/france/LaHaine.htm. • Photo of Hubert taken from shipintv.com. Article published by Grinchu on July 15, 2013. Article titled Hubert Koundé. http://shpintv.com/hubert-kounde/ • Photo of Saïd taken from an article titled France/Benin/Morocco: Jodie Foster on "La Haine”. Published on September 7, 2009 for bombastic element. http://www.bombasticelement.org/2009/09/francebeninmorocco-jodie-foster-on-la.html • Screenshots of les banlieues, the train, and the police brutality scene all taken from Blu-ray.com. The article was written on May 8, 2012, and it’s titled La Haine Blue-ray. http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/La-Haine-Blu-ray/38677/#Screenshots. • Photo of final scene taken from minineyes’s tumblr blog. Posted three months ago. http://minineyes.tumblr.com