Li Fet Met
2006
France
72 minutes
Arabic
The SAS (Special Administrative Section) units were created by the French Army during the Algerian War to “pacify” the indigenous population. In the daytime, the SAS quarters were used as medical centres and at nightfall as torture chambers in the effort to break the Algerian resistance. When independence came, the centres were recycled as housing for villagers. Forty-six years later, at Laperrine, the families of resistance fighters, the sons of native French-army conscripts, the sons of Harkis and refugees who fled terrorism live side by side, in the same poverty, along with their memories, and a similar rejection of a present that bears little resemblance to the dream of Independence. (Yann Lardeau)
Production :
Play Film; Images Plus; Tribu; CRRAV Centre régional de ressources audiovisuelles de la région Nord-Pas de Calais
Play Film; Images Plus; Tribu; CRRAV Centre régional de ressources audiovisuelles de la région Nord-Pas de Calais
Distribution :
Andana Films
Andana Films
Editing :
Mehmet Arikan; Christine Carrière
Mehmet Arikan; Christine Carrière
Sound :
Nadia Bouferkas
Nadia Bouferkas
Photography :
Mehmet Arikan
Mehmet Arikan