Intimate Enemies is a French war drama set in the year 1959 during the Algerian War of Independence. It follows a platoon of French soldiers stationed in Kabylia, Algeria, and explores the moral transformations they undergo. The film delves into themes of loyalty, violence, and the downward spiral of war. As tensions rise, the soldiers face challenges such as friendly fire, sniper attacks, and the ethical implications of their actions. Intimate Enemies provides a raw and intense portrayal of the psychological toll of war.
Antigone, a young girl living in Quebec, Canada, becomes involved in a rebellion against authority after the death of her brother. She takes action and navigates the legal system to fight for justice and challenge the rules of society.
With no news from her husband, who left in the ‘70s to work in France, a middle-aged Rekia leaves her village and goes on a journey to Paris. She crosses Algeria and the Mediterranean Sea, gets lost in the alleys of the quarter of Pigalle, to finally find her dear Nura in the distant suburb of Paris in a hostel for retired migrant workers. But her hero, a veteran of the struggle for the liberation of Algeria, has become quite different, has become a stranger.
This film, is about the courage and the determination of a young woman in djurdjur"as mountain in Algeria, fighting for her ancestor land during the earlier years of french occupation.
At long last, the two Hamlet sisters are allowed to go to Paris by themselves, and the discotheque they have heard about beckons. When the driver for their ride home becomes too drunk to drive, they cannot reach their mother by phone, and it is too late to take the last train back to where they live, they are stranded in town. The girls, who are themselves partly of Algerian descent, are accosted by a disreputable looking older Algerian immigrant, who tries to give them cash so that they can take a taxi back to their homes. They are afraid of him and try to get away from him. He apparently accepts this, but trails them without calling attention to himself. It is good that he does, for they soon run into real trouble, and then they find out that despite his frightening appearance, he means them well.
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