----Certain Regard
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Critics' Week

----Directors' Fortnight








Certain Regard
La Saison des Hommes
by
Moufada Tlatli
France/Tunisia
In Tunisia, "La saison des hommes" is the name given to the period when men who work away from home return to visit their wives. Aicha (Rabiaa Ben Abdallah) married Said (Ezzedine Gennoun) when she was 18. Said works for eleven months of the year in Tunisia and, as Islamic custom dictates, Aicha submits to his mother's authority at home in Djerba. It's within the enclosed community of women that director Moufada Tlatli sets the follow-up to her well-received, commercially successful debut, Les Silences Du Palais (The Silences of the Palace, 1993). "Djerba is a closed world, as the palace was in my first film" explains Tlatli.

When Aicha tells Said she
wants to leave Djerba and accompany him to Tunis, Said makes it a condition that she bear him a son. Over the years, she bears two daughters, Meriem (Ghalia Ben Ali) and Emna (Hend Sabri), who grow up in the suffocating world of Djerba. When Aicha gives birth to a boy, Aziz, he seems to inherit his mother's neuroses. With the family having moved to Tunis, it is revealed that Aziz is autistic, and Said blames his wife for the boy's condition. Her life becoming unbearable, Aicha now wants to return to Djerba. She does so and, with her family around her, rebuilds their life.


"When my daughter was growing up she would ask me a lot of questions," says Tlatli. "It was her doubts that led me to write La Saison Des Hommes
as a way of telling the parallel stories of two generations. This film is for her. It's my take on the girls of today and what they have to say is going to cause trouble in Tunisia ­ what seems banal to Westerners is often very daring back home for us."

She adds that she spoke to young University students between the ages of 18 and 24 and was "astonished at their conservatism, their frozen mentality. The girls keep silent. The boys have flings with girls but will still only marry virgins. The taboo of virginity weighs heavy."

While she acknowledges that Tunisia, her place of birth, is "a model for the emancipation of women" among Arab countries, Tlatli also firmly states that "14 centuries' worth of taboos don't get washed away in one generation." La Saison Des Hommes is an account of the two generations beginning that process.

Jonathan Holland

Cast Rabiaa Ben Abdallah, Sabah Bouzouita, Ghelia Ben Ali
Scr Moufida Tlatli
Prod co Les Films de Losange/ Maghrebfilms Carthage/Arte France Cinema
Run Time 122 mn

Cannes 99 - Cannes 98 - Cannes 97 - Cannes 96 - Cannes 95