Sie befasst sich mit den schrecklichen Ereignissen vom 5. Dezember 1986, die zum Tod von Malik Oussekine führten und denen noch nie eine Serie gewidmet wurde.Sie befasst sich mit den schrecklichen Ereignissen vom 5. Dezember 1986, die zum Tod von Malik Oussekine führten und denen noch nie eine Serie gewidmet wurde.Sie befasst sich mit den schrecklichen Ereignissen vom 5. Dezember 1986, die zum Tod von Malik Oussekine führten und denen noch nie eine Serie gewidmet wurde.
- Nominiert für 1 BAFTA Award
- 5 Gewinne & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt
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Ausgewählte Rezension
As Episode 1 of "Oussekine" (2022 release from France; 4 episodes of about 60 min each) opens, it is :December 5, 1986" and we are introduced to Malik Oussekine, a French college kid of Algerian descent. He is excited to have tickets for the Nina Simone concert. After the show while walking to the metro station, he inadvertently gets mixed up in a street demonstration, and before we know it, the French national police chases Malik down an alley where they club him to death... At this point we are 10 min into Episode 1.
Couple of comments: this is the latest from French writer-director Antoine Chevrillier ("Baron Noir"). Here he reassesses the events that led to an unarmed 22 yr. Man of Algerian descent being beaten to death by French police in riot gear. More importantly, the series looks at the long shadows of these events. Along the way we get flashbacks how Malik's parents ended up in France in the early 60s, dealing with being "second class" citizens and all it entails. This mini-series is sure to make the hairs stand on your arms, and not only because of the incomprehensible ways of the French justice system. What really is striking how familiar all of this will sound to an American audience, all you have to do is to change "Algerian descent" to "African-American" and there you go. It's been 35+ years since these events played out in France, and the obvious question is whether anything has changed. Let me put it this way: the extreme right French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, whose anti-immigration and outright racist policies are at the core of her political party National Front, managed to get 43% of the vote in last month's presidential election (up from 33% in the 2017 presidential election, and up from 17% in the 2012 presidential election). If this trend continues (and I don't know why it wouldn't), France will have it own version of Trump as its president in 2027. And has gotten police brutality and racism any better?
"Oussekine" premiered on Hulu a few weeks ago and I would have missed it, except that Hulu "suggested" it to me based on my viewing habits. I watched all 4 episodes over 2 nights earlier this week. If you are in the mood for a heavy duty min-series that brings a damning look at French police brutality and racism surrounding a senseless death in 1986, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is the latest from French writer-director Antoine Chevrillier ("Baron Noir"). Here he reassesses the events that led to an unarmed 22 yr. Man of Algerian descent being beaten to death by French police in riot gear. More importantly, the series looks at the long shadows of these events. Along the way we get flashbacks how Malik's parents ended up in France in the early 60s, dealing with being "second class" citizens and all it entails. This mini-series is sure to make the hairs stand on your arms, and not only because of the incomprehensible ways of the French justice system. What really is striking how familiar all of this will sound to an American audience, all you have to do is to change "Algerian descent" to "African-American" and there you go. It's been 35+ years since these events played out in France, and the obvious question is whether anything has changed. Let me put it this way: the extreme right French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, whose anti-immigration and outright racist policies are at the core of her political party National Front, managed to get 43% of the vote in last month's presidential election (up from 33% in the 2017 presidential election, and up from 17% in the 2012 presidential election). If this trend continues (and I don't know why it wouldn't), France will have it own version of Trump as its president in 2027. And has gotten police brutality and racism any better?
"Oussekine" premiered on Hulu a few weeks ago and I would have missed it, except that Hulu "suggested" it to me based on my viewing habits. I watched all 4 episodes over 2 nights earlier this week. If you are in the mood for a heavy duty min-series that brings a damning look at French police brutality and racism surrounding a senseless death in 1986, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
- paul-allaer
- 3. Juni 2022
- Permalink
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