|
|
|
|
- |
|
|
Alliance française de Philadelphie - 1420 Walnut St, Suite 700 |

Petit Pays directed by Éric Barbier, based on the acclaimed novel Petit Pays by Gaël Faye
2020 France, 153min - In French with English Subtitles
Synopsis
The film follows Gabriel (“Gaby”), a ten-year-old boy enjoying a peaceful, carefree childhood with his younger sister Ana. Their father, Michel, is a French businessman living a comfortable expatriate life, while their mother, Yvonne, is a Rwandan refugee haunted by memories of home. Through Gaby’s innocent eyes, the viewer witnesses both the beauty of childhood—days spent stealing mangoes, playing with friends, and exploring nature—and the gradual disintegration of his world as political violence and family discord shatter this paradise.
The film’s power lies in its faithfulness to the child’s perspective: we see the world change as Gaby does, from innocence to incomprehensible loss. The lush landscapes and gentle pacing of the first half make the later descent into chaos even more devastating, showing war not through soldiers or politics, but through the dreams and fears of a boy who just wants to be a child.
The film stars Dijibril Vancoppenolle as Gaby, Jean-Paul Rouve as his father, and Isabelle Kabano as his mother. Their performances, especially Kabano’s portrayal of a woman torn between conflicting identities, have been praised for emotional authenticity. The film is not an exact reproduction of the book, but it captures its spirit—a story balancing love and conflict, Africa and the West, childhood and violence.
The movie closely mirrors the novel’s autobiographical roots. Gaël Faye, the Franco-Rwandan author and musician, was himself born in Burundi to a French father and Rwandan mother. His 2016 novel Petit Pays won several literary prizes, including the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens, and has been translated into more than thirty languages. The book moves from the tranquility of childhood to the awakening of political awareness, portraying the fragility of innocence in a world fractured by hatred.
Together, the novel and the film form a moving dialogue between memory and trauma—between the written word and the visual image. Petit Pays reminds us that even in times of violence, childhood memories can still hold traces of beauty, warmth, and an enduring longing for peace.
The film’s lingering question—can innocence survive history?—echoes deeply across cultures, making Petit Pays both a personal story and a universal reflection on what it means to lose one’s world too soon.
Day: Wednesday, April 29th, 2026
Time: 6:30-8.30pm
Location: Alliance Francaise de Philadelphie, 1420 Walnut St, Suite 700, Philadelphia, PA 19102
Language: French with English subtitles - Post film discussion in French
Fee: $10 for AF Members / $15 for non AF Members
*** NOT A MEMBER YET ? ***
Create your membership
and join the AF members team !
Have an Account? Click here to Login