Pa-ra-da
Pa-ra-da
| 28 August 2008 (USA)
Watch Free for 30 Days

Stream thousands of hit movies and TV shows

Start 30-day Free Trial
Pa-ra-da Trailers

The film tells the true story of French clown Miloud Oukili from his arrival in Romania in 1992 (three years after the fall of Ceausescu) to his encounter with the street children of Bucharest, known as «boskettari» who live in the streets and sleep in Bucharest's sewers, eking a living out of petty crime, begging, and prostitution.

Reviews
Bereamic

Awesome Movie

Voxitype

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

View More
BelSports

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

View More
Dana

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

View More
Max_cinefilo89

When director Marco Pontecorvo, son of the more famous Gillo Pontecorvo, presented this film at numerous festivals (starting with Venice), he revealed that it took nearly seven years to make the movie because of funding issues, but also due to his day job as a cinematographer (his most notable effort is a few episodes of the HBO show Rome). Nevertheless, he refused to give up, much like the protagonist of Pa-ra-da, a moving true story of kindness prevailing against all odds.The title derives from an organization that takes care of street kids in Romania. Actually, the organization didn't exist during the time-span covered in the film, but the seeds of its genesis can be seen very clearly in the efforts of Miloud (Jalil Lespert), clown of French origin, and his friends. What the young man discovers in Bucarest is a shocking reality: thirteen-year old boys and girls who steal, do drugs, live in the sewers and even have to deal with the occasional abortion or two. It's a grim situation, and Miloud, ever the optimist, vows to do everything in his power to make sure those children can have a better future.The movie was shot on location, in the same places where the real Miloud had been (Pontecorvo said they literally followed his footsteps), and given the director's inexperience (this is his feature debut), a documentary-style approach was thought to be the ideal solution. It works splendidly, the hand-held cameras and the blatantly unprofessional but intense acting merging in a picture that paints a dramatic but ultimately uplifting portrait of life and its various aspects, both positive and negative. It's a tribute to imagination, freedom and the dream of happiness, all of which are conveyed through an inspired, inspiring film that marks the beginning of what could be a very promising new career for Pontecorvo. As long as it doesn't take him seven years for the next movie too, that is.

View More
Ruxandra Grecu

I am a journalist and I first heard about this movie when it had a screening at the Venice Film Festival earlier this year. I found the synopsis intriguing, thinking "Oh, no, another prejudiced film about Romanian homeless children". So I did an interview with one of the Romanian actors, and I felt emotion in his voice as he talked about it.So now, at the Bucharest DaKino Festival, I finally saw the movie, and I was so very touched. I was very young in 1992, when the action takes place, so I don't remember that much from the post-communist era. I do know that this french/Algerian Miloud, an idealist, really tried to make a difference, and he did! He actually saved children living in the sewers, and for that I thank him

View More