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35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insha'Allah: The Durability of a Father/Son Relationship
LE GRAND VOYAGE is a gentle miracle of a film, a work made more profound because of its understated script by writer/director Ismaël Ferroukhi who allows the natural scenery of this 'road trip' story and the sophisticated acting of the stars Nicolas Cazalé and Mohamed Majd to carry the emotional impact of the film. Ferroukhi's vision is very capably enhanced by...
Published on September 1, 2008 by Grady Harp

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6 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Trip That Doesn't Arrive
The synopsis I read (on an un-named video rental/watch online site) said that the father and son realize that "the destination isn't the point, it's the journey". I didn't find myself in agreement, on that point.

We're in France (where?) and an old muslim man wants to go on the Haj. His oldest son, who is to drive him, gets arrested and loses his license,...
Published on February 10, 2009 by Gryphonisle


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35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insha'Allah: The Durability of a Father/Son Relationship, September 1, 2008
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This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
LE GRAND VOYAGE is a gentle miracle of a film, a work made more profound because of its understated script by writer/director Ismaël Ferroukhi who allows the natural scenery of this 'road trip' story and the sophisticated acting of the stars Nicolas Cazalé and Mohamed Majd to carry the emotional impact of the film. Ferroukhi's vision is very capably enhanced by the cinematography of Katell Djian (a sensitive mixture of travelogue vistas of horizons and tightly photographed duets between characters) and the musical score by Fowzi Guerdjou who manages to maintain some beautiful themes throughout the film while paying homage to the many local musical variations from the numerous countries the film surveys.

Reda (Nicolas Cazalé) lives with his Muslim family in Southern France, a young student with a Western girlfriend who does not seem to be following the religious direction of his heritage. His elderly father (Mohamed Majd) has decided his time has come to make his Hadj to Mecca, and being unable to drive, requests the reluctant Reda to forsake his personal needs to drive him to his ultimate religious obligation. The two set out in a fragile automobile to travel through France, into Italy, and on through Bulgaria, Croatia, Slovenia, and Turkey to Saudi Arabia. Along the trip Reda pleads with his father to visit some of the interesting sights, but his father remains focused on the purpose of the journey and Reda is irritably left to struggle with his father's demands. On their pilgrimage they encounter an old woman (Ghina Ognianova) who attaches herself to the two men and must eventually be deserted by Reda, a Turkish man Mustapha (Jacky Nercessian) who promises to guide the father/son duo but instead brings about a schism by getting Reda drunk in a bar and disappearing, and countless border patrol guards and custom agents who delay their progress for various reasons. Tensions between father and son mount: Reda cannot understand the importance of this pilgrimage so fraught with trials and mishaps, and the father cannot comprehend Reda's insensitivity to the father's religious beliefs and needs. At last they reach Mecca where they are surrounded by hoards of pilgrims from all around the world and the sensation of trip's significance is overwhelming to Reda. The manner in which the story comes to a close is touching and rich with meaning. It has taken a religious pilgrimage to restore the gap between youth and old age, between son and father, and between defiance and acceptance of religious values.

The visual impact of this film is extraordinary - all the more so because it feels as though the camera just 'happens' to catch the beauty of the many stopping points along the way without the need to enhance them with special effects. Nicolas Cazalé is a superb actor (be sure to see his most recent and currently showing film 'The Grocer's Son') and it is his carefully nuanced role that brings the magic to this film. Another fine film from The Film Movement, this is a tender story brilliantly told. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, September 08
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The road to Mecca . . ., October 8, 2007
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
In this French-Moroccan road movie, a father and son travel by car from France to Saudi Arabia. For the father, it is his once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage to Mecca. For the teenage son, completely westernized, with a non-Muslim girlfriend and school exams to take, it is the worst possible turn of events. They quarrel much of the way or press on in bitter silence, as the road takes them through Italy, the Balkans, Turkey, Syria and Jordan. Along the way, there is trouble at border crossings and they pick up riders - not always willingly. Eventually, in a blow-up over a gift of money to a begging woman at a well in the desert, they reach a crisis that threatens to separate them.

As travelogue, the film is fascinating. European landscapes give way dramatically in Turkey to the East, with a visit to the Blue Mosque in Istanbul and a nightclub with singing and dancing. Intensity builds as their journey converges with that of other pilgrims until they merge with the vast crowds from all over the Muslim world in Mecca. The performances are fine, as the mercurial emotions of the son drive his moods in conflicting directions and the stolid father clings stubbornly to his own determination to do it all his way. A winner at the Venice Film Festival.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Family pilgrimage, October 17, 2010
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This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
"Le Grand Voyage" works on several levels. It tells the story of an aging French North African man's determination to fulfill every Muslim's lifetime obligation to make the pilgrimage to Mecca. The film also looks at the great personal distance between the man and his youngest son, a teenager born in France and French through and through, with little interest in or understanding of his aged father's religion or commitment to the pilgrimage. Reda, the teenager, is drafted to drive his father to Mecca when an older brother loses his driver's license through a DUI incident. Reda, with lycee exams looming and passionate attachment to a French girlfriend, is anything but enthusiastic about making the trip with a parent he has little emotional connection. The pilgrimage begins with a series of spats that the father uses to establish his authority over the son and son employs to demonstrate his displeasure with being yanked out of his comfortable life as a European teenager.

Despite some bumpy transitions in the film, the director, Ismael Ferroukhi, does a credible job in moving the film forward literally (with the cross-Europe travel toward Saudi Arabia) and the slower coverage of distance between the father and son. The eventual arrival in Mecca brings some understanding of the father's passion for the trip to both the character's son and the non-Muslim viewer. The final epiphany for Reda will follow events in Mecca.

There is a lot to like about this film story--the unconventionally beautiful landscapes, the complicated relationship between the principal characters, the small adventures with others that occur on the trip and the fulfillment of the pilgrimage or hadj are all engaging and credible. This film does not operate like a Hollywood production in any sense of the word. The viewer has some work to do here and that makes the film all the more interesting. Recommended.
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12 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great movie.., March 14, 2006
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
Great movie. A bit monotonous at beginning and parts, but very deep message regarding human nature. I understand why it won so many awards at various festivals. It is a dialectic between tradition and modernity or Faith and secularism.
Nevertheless, the message remains that human nature transcends all human characters and triumphs at the end. More things unite us than divide us.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars awesome, June 9, 2008
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
this movie is awesome. its very touching and teaches you a little about their culture. good story...just keep watching that beginning may be a little slow but it picks up and the ending is a tear jerker :) teaches you a little bit about life...
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Film Movement, November 12, 2006
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This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
The company releasing Le Grand Voyages prides itself on bringing great cinema to the viewer. This movies like their others is not maintream but don't fear, with this company you're in good hands. The hook for me is usually a director that I'm following or a particular actor that I like or the music is by some great composer like Morricone or Preisner. On this occasion I bought the film because of Nicholas Cazale. I wasn't disppaointed. The clash of religious intolerance and western liberalism, which is the subtext of the movie, is sensitively handled.
Gazbo
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars loveable, real people, April 2, 2011
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (Amazon Instant Video)
really liked this film
father-son relationship that is uncovered during the road trip. before that, they were living on different planets
not very much about islam, actually not at all
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully touching, January 23, 2011
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
Relationships between fathers and sons are often complicated and the one expressed here, in "Le Grand Voyage", is no different. In fact, the chasm between Reda (Nicolas Cazalé) and his elderly father (Mohamed Majd) is so wide that it seems insurmountable to fill. Yet, the sudden 3,000 mile journey that the two make between France and Mecca explores this relationship exceedingly well.

Unsure that he will ever make the pilgrimage to Mecca due to his advancing age and health, Reda's father sternly asks Reda to take him. Not in a plane, as Reda would have preferred, but by car. They traverse Italy, the Balkans, Turkey and Syria, running into all sorts and conditions of people. Neither Reda nor his father can quite figure the other one out, but by the end and in a final touching scene, the film comes full circle.

"Le Grand Voyage" was a break out film for Cazalé, a rising star and compelling leading man. But this film really belongs to Majd. He is perfectly attuned to the idiosyncrasies of his role and he is a pleasure to watch. This is a lovely film in many ways and I highly recommend it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable and well-acted film of a spiritual journey, December 21, 2010
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (Amazon Instant Video)
Reda and his father don't have much in common, though Reda is obliged to drive his father to Mecca. In a journey that turns out to be life-changing for both, they travel through France, Italy, Serbia, Turkey, Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia to find much more then they could anticipate.

One of the rare films to be shot in Mecca and to break the common misconceptions of Islamic traditions.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great , amasing =Movie, and= Jouney., April 28, 2008
This review is from: Le Grand Voyage (DVD)
I recently saw this movie.I was totally surprised at the Movie contents.The Love of aFather, the hate of the son.Then the Love and hate of the son and father.But in the end, it shows that love trnscends all boundries, and wins in the end.A must see for all.You will not be dis-appointed in the end.-===Samsad Sirkhan.
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Le Grand Voyage by Ismael Ferroukhi
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