Take Your Ten Thousand Francs and Get Out
Take Your Ten Thousand Francs and Get Out
| 02 January 1981 (USA)
Watch Free for 30 Days

Stream thousands of hit movies and TV shows

Start 30-day Free Trial
Take Your Ten Thousand Francs and Get Out Trailers View All

Two young Algerians born in France leave the Paris region to return with their parents to the village of their origins. They speak neither Arabic nor Berber. First barrier which isolates them from their new environment and which is further accentuated by the problem of generations, present here as in France. The social position of Algerian women posed to young emigrants is more immediately felt and proves to be a generator of conflict. Thanks to the plot, it is the whole problem of the reintegration of emigrants in their land of origin that the film poses and illustrates.

Reviews
WillSushyMedia

This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.

View More
pointyfilippa

The movie runs out of plot and jokes well before the end of a two-hour running time, long for a light comedy.

View More
Kamila Bell

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
Scotty Burke

It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review

View More
raidatlanta

I hesitated between rating this a 7 or 8, but i think i went for a 7 because lets face it, the movie is a little dull.the story is simple, parents who had immigrated from Algeria to France return to Algeria, and their children who seemingly were born in France and had always lived there have trouble adapting. it has some very good elements and provides a nice "inside view" of Algeria, Algerian society and the relations between the Algerian and the french within Algeria, which is interesting since it's usually much easier to find documents about their relations within France, but not Algeria.Personally i find it could have benefited the film to show a bit more of them in France. we mostly only see that in the first few minutes and in one or two flashbacks (i can only recall one by memory). it would have helped to show contrast maybe, and would have made the movie easier to follow for people who would necessarily have been able to guess what was happening at the start. (the opening scenes that are in France don't have a direct link with the scenes of them going back to Algeria, and so it did take me about 10 minutes for me to realize that movie was about French Algerians going back to Algeria and not Algerians immigrating to France).Nevertheless, it is a good movie of what we would call "Cinéma d'auteur" (author's cinema). the film is more like a novel, with some more drawn out shots and with some scenes that, even though not directly linked to the story itself, go with the film showing Algeria at that time in general. the magazine "le Quotidien De Paris" even compared it's author (and director) to Marcel Pagnol when it came out. It is also Mahmoud Zemouri's first movie as a director.of course, as i said, it does turn out a little dull, and the end is a little inconclusive, as if they had lacked budget, time or film, but it's still good, in my opinion. It's also a good place to learn french slang since about two thirds or the movie's french dialogues are written in it. it must also be interesting for people speaking Arabic, since i did hear a lot of french mixed into the Algerian Arabic dialogues.

View More