by Eliane De Latour
Ivory Coast and France / 2002 / 110mins / Drama / French and Nushi
Toussaint and Nixon are teenage pals who can't find jobs. After accidentally committing murder, they join the Bronx, a gang that rules the ghetto of Barbes. Violence, partying, and blood brotherhood challenge the boys' friendship and their desire to "become someone tomorrow."
Eliane De Latour
Eliane de Latour, research director at the CNRS (French National Center for Scientific Research), anthropologist and film director began making documentary films after completing her thesis, alternating shoots in France and Africa while continuing to write. She then turned to fiction and also writing a novel, Malik Ambar. Through cinema, photography, scientific or literary writing hers is an insider’s look at the closed worlds of those who are forced behind a physical or social barrier. Whether dealing with the elderly community of Cévennes, harems in Nigeria, the prison institution, ghettos in the Ivory Coast, underground migrants, young football players, black slaves in India in the 17th century, minors in prison in Morocco or young sex-workers displaced by war in the Ivory Coast, her research subjects are centered around social reclusion and its corollary: major or minor achievements of freedom. Learn More