In fact, with his fourth feature, Philippe Falardeau (La moitié gauche du frigo, Congorama) has crafted that rare kind of film that brings together young and old, Plateau and Dollard-des-Ormeaux, readers of 7 Jours, NIGHTLIFE.CA and National Geographic. It tugs at your heartstrings, but not in a cheap, cue-the-violins kind of way. It does so with panache, subtlety and richly layered storytelling. The most remarkable feat about Lazhar is that it tackles so many potentially weighty themes – grief; guilt; the callous, bureaucratic nightmare of Canadian immigration; the lackluster level of French taught in Quebec’s public schools; the codified relationships between teachers and their students, and the list goes on – and yet the film never feels heavy-handed, nor is it reduced to a superficial treatment of said issues.
Sophie Nélisse and Fellag, Monsieur Lazhar
Émilien Néron and Sophie Nélisse, Monsieur Lazhar
I mention Laurent Cantet’s Palme d’Or-winning The Class (2008) to Falardeau, another classroom drama (albeit grittier, with more of a documentary feel, and set in Paris’ multi-ethnic banlieues) which, not unlike Lazhar, builds on a teacher-student dynamic in a culturally diverse milieu. In a telling moment of humility, Falardeau confesses how devastated he was after seeing it. “When I saw The Class, I was pretty bummed out,” says the genial director. “I was writing Monsieur Lazhar at the time, and I thought The Class was so good that I almost gave up on writing it. I told myself that the great film set in a classroom had been done. But talking it over with my producer [Ed’s Note: the same team behind last year’s Oscar-nominated Incendies], he made me realize that we weren’t going in the same direction at all. I guess I’m just like that,” he answers with a chuckle, in response to my clearly taken aback mug. “When I see a good film, I can either be totally inspired and think to myself ‘I want to make films!’, or conversely, I can also think ‘I’ll just never be that good, might as well change careers right away.’” Needless to say, we’re all very relieved he chose to be inspired by The Class.
Fellag in Monsieur Lazhar
Monsieur Lazhar ****
Now in theatres