|
WSWS
: Arts Review
How Tavernier's It All Starts Today affected a French
village
"Before we were sad, but the film has changed our lives"
By Susan Allan
8 August 2000
Use
this version to print
One of the more compassionate movies produced last year was
It All Starts Today by veteran French director Bertrand
Tavernier. The film, which used professional actors and local
residents with no previous acting experience, is a dramatic recreation
of the everyday experiences of Daniel Lefebvre, (Philippe Torreton),
the head teacher of a pre-school in the once thriving, now poverty-stricken
mining village of Anzin in northern France. The son of a miner,
Lefebvre is called upon to deal with a myriad of social problems
and some real family tragedies. Deeply concerned over power cut-offs
to poor parents and lack of social workers, he decides to take
a stand against the Communist Party-controlled local council.
How do teachers and schools cope when families cannot pay fees
once provided by the government or by local councils? How do the
parents feel who cannot pay? What do teachers do when families
don't have enough money to feed their children or pay the electricity
bill? What steps does a teacher take if they suspect a child is
being physically abused? What are the implications if the teacher's
report is a mistake and a child is removed from their family's
care?
While providing no easy answers, It All Starts Today,
which will be screened in New York and Los Angeles this September,
honestly, and with sensitivity and optimism, examines some of
these questions. Moved by Tavernier's film, which presents a realistic
picture of the day-to-day stresses, difficulties and achievements
of teachers, and his interview last year with the World Socialist
Web Site, I decided to visit Anzin and meet some of the parents
and teachers who appeared in the film. I wondered what impact
it had on them and how they viewed the experience of working on
a dramatic recreation of their lives.
Hardship is not new to residents of the region. In fact, Emile
Zola's novel Germinal was inspired by the struggle of miners
from this area. Zola's novel details the determined fight by 12,000
miners and their families to halt wage cuts demanded by mine owners.
Facing starvation and after a bitter conflict with the military,
which is called in to break the strike, the miners were forced
back to work under the conditions demanded by the owners.
Today Anzin and surrounding areas have some of the worst pockets
of poverty and unemployment in France. The last coal mine in the
region was shut 30 years ago and the steel industry closed a decade
ago. Officially, unemployment in greater Valenciennes is 18.9
percent, but according to some estimates it is over 30 percent.
The main source of employment consists of clearing land occupied
by abandoned industry.
After a two-hour trip by train from Paris to Valenciennes station
I met Michelle Niewrzedra, Anzin's pre-school director, who took
me to the Bertrand Tavernier Pre-School, renamed in honour of
the director. Niewrzedra, who has been the pre-school head for
10 years and a teacher for 30 years, has lived in the area all
her life. Her father was a railway worker and her husband's family
were miners. In the film, she played one of the mothers on the
school committee.
The pre-school cares
for 142 children, between two- and five-years-old, in five classes.
It was odd at first to walk up the stairs, through the front glass
doors and look down a school corridor that I had already come
to know in the movie. The school walls were covered with children's
photographs, paintings and drawings of Torreton and Tavernier.
Although the corridor and schoolrooms were bright and colorful,
the facilities were meagre and the playground completely bare.
Niewrzedra explained that the school had been vandalised at least
seven times in the previous 10 years.
We met many of the children who had appeared in the film. In
one class those who participated were asked to indicate. A sea
of hands shot up in the air and remained proudly raised for the
whole time we were in the room. Some other toddlersnormally
a class of 28 two-year-olds and six three-year-oldswere
having a snack of milk and chocolate biscuits.
Niewrzedra said that many of the parents are unemployed and
the children are often sent to school without food. If that happens,
or if the family has no money for clothes, then other parents
bring extra, she said. This attitude, Niewrzedra added,
has only developed since the film.
She explained some of the difficulties facing teachers. How
can we give them enough attention and develop their full intellectual
potential? Today there are so many problems with the families.
Many don't have work, the parents have conflicts and sometimes
the children don't have any money or food and there is no discipline
in the home. The teachers are very conscious of these problems
and although this exerts a huge pressure on us there is now a
real awareness that we cannot blame the individuals.
Asked if Tavernier's film had forced the government to provide
more funding or teachers in the area, Niewrzedra smiled and said,
No, but the biggest change is that parents feel they can
talk about their problems with the teachers. They are out in the
openthey do not feel ashamed. The parents are more involved
in the school and there is more solidarity.
The effect of Tavernier's film on the community has been significant
and readily acknowledged by all those I met. Just as It All
Starts Today ends with a festival devised by Valeria (Maria
Pitaressi), Lefebvre's artist girlfriend, to overcome the tragedy,
anguish and despair in the community, so the film itself has helped
to invigorate and raise the cultural life and spirit of the community.
Martine Goeminne, the wife of the local school inspector, described
Tavernier as a great artist and added: I believe that Tavernier's
film is like Emile Zola's Germinal because it presents
the conditions and lives of the workers, but far more optimistically.
It does not speak directly about politics, but about the social
problems and therefore touches everyone. Before the film I found
it impossible to speak about the problems in the community, now
the door has been opened.
Goeminne continued: In the 1960s our area was very productive
with many mines and factories. Under these conditions we were
able to develop culture for peoplea large theatre was built
in the areabut now there are no jobs and people are leaving.
In the area there were once 35,000 workers and now only 10,000.
Just recently a worker in the area committed suicide because he
was out of work.
Benoît Constant,
a retired metal worker who lives in a small house next door to
the school, welcomed me to his home. Constant, who played Lefebvre's
father in It All Starts Today, explained that he been reluctant
to appear in the film, but decided to participate after discussing
its importance with Tavernier.
Of course I have always been aware of the problems in
societydrugs, unemployment, vandalism and crime, he
said. But now I understand why they exist and I no longer
blame the people. There are other reasons that have to be understood,
he said.
Constant showed me a special album he had prepared with all
sorts of memorabilia from the movienewspaper articles, photos
and reviewsand proudly read aloud a card from Tavernier
and a letter from Torreton, expressing their gratitude for his
contribution to the film.
Yamina Duvivier and
Corinne Agthe, two mothers who also appeared in the film, explained
its impact on them. Duvivier said: Before the film we were
very sad, but the film has changed our lives because it made us
conscious of what is happening in the world around us and that
we exist as well. Bertrand spent hours listening to us, finding
out our concerns. This was very important because no one had ever
listened to us before. Our lives and ideas were incorporated in
the film and now we have the courage to speak.
Both women, who have been inspired to write and direct their
own play, Carpe Diem (Seize the Day), said that poverty
and unemployment meant that their children were denied a decent
cultural education. Without culture you cannot develop,
Agthe said, it's the opening to the future.
Carpe Diem continues to investigate the issues raised
by Tavernier's filmthe poverty and social problems in the
area. We have written the play, they said, to
explain everything we felt and to try and awaken others. We hope
we have been heard. We know it will not change the world but it
will make a difference.
This comment was typical of those who spoke to me. No-one expressed
any confidence that the government would resolve their difficulties.
Like Lefebvre, who refused to accept the cuts imposed by the local
authorities, many voiced a new determination to take control of
their own destinies.
In one way or another, everyone emphasised that the problems
they faced were social, not individual. This basic conception,
which may appear obvious, marks a change from the mood of despair
that previously gripped many parents and teachers. One senses
that the feeling of isolation and confusion felt by workers and
their families in Anzina product of decades of political
betrayal by the traditional organisations and parties of the working
classis beginning to break up. The film, which has brought
to light previously untapped talents in this northern French village,
has also compelled its residents to look more carefully at their
own lives and to recognise that what they have to say is important
and interesting.
It is not that the film resolves the difficulties confronting
the communityto believe that would be to trivialise the
political problems yet to be confronted. Nevertheless, many of
those involved better understand their situation.
As Claude, another pre-school teacher who also appeared in
the film, said: In a certain way things have not changed
since the film, for me at least. Last year I had 25 students in
a class. Now I have 33 (three- and four-year-olds) because we
made one class smaller. However to work on the film, and now the
play, has allowed me to meet the parents in a different way. I
see the parents and the problems in a new light, with more understanding.
And although it is still very difficult to intervene with the
families to raise issues, such as why are you not feeding your
child, there is a better atmosphere amongst the teachers at the
school. We now act as accomplicestogether.
No small part of this understanding has come about as a result
of the response that the film has evoked internationally. In Niewrzedra's
office she showed me a huge folder of letters and postcards she
had received from around the world, including from teachers in
France, Canada, and Australia. Dear cousins this film is
true and You have shown my life were common
responses. As these messages show, Tavernier's filmthrough
an examination of one small pre-school in northern Francehas
managed to reveal experiences that are universal.
See Also:
An interview with
Bertrand Tavernier
"My job is to dream and invent, and out of this produce
something that will change the world"
[10 July 1999]
It All Starts Today:
A work of authenticity, artistic substance and optimism
[10 July 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |