Alphabetical           State by State
 Europe News Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 News and Weather
 Africa
 Alternative Media
 Asia
 Australia
 Breaking News
 Business
 By Category
 Canada
 Central America
 College and University
 Columns
 Columns and Columnists
 Current Events
 Daily
 Editorial
 Entertainment
 Europe
 Ezines
 Filters
 Government
 Indices
 Industry Information
 Internet Broadcasts
 Ireland
 Journalism
 Magazines
 Media
 Middle East
 New Zealand
 News Directories
 News Satire
 Newspapers
 Newswires
 North America
 Online
 Personalized News
 Politics
 Radio
 Regional
 Services
 Software and Agents
 South America
 Sports
 Technology
 USA
 Universities and Colleges
 Weather
 Weekly
 World
Copyright © 1998-00 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Europe:  Paris Middle Schoolers Earn Acclaim for Film Roles  
Tuesday, May 27, 2008 5:12 PM

Students from a tough middle school in Paris are earning accolades after a movie they acted in won the top...


Students from a tough middle school in Paris are earning accolades after a movie they acted in won the top prize at the Cannes film festival Sunday. From Paris, Lisa Bryant reports the celebrations shed a rare, positive light on diversity in France and troubles in the country's education system.

Director Lauren Cantet celebrates win of Palme d'Or at Cannes film festival with members of cast of his movie "The Class"
Director Lauren Cantet celebrates win of Palme d'Or at Cannes film festival with members of cast of his movie The Class
Students from the Francoise Dolto school in northeastern Paris came home to a hero's welcome this week, after a semi-documentary film about their institution won the coveted Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival.

Titled, Entre les Murs, The Class in English, the movie is about the relationship between a teacher and his students. While the movie is based on a book, the school is real and the students play themselves.

Francoise Dolto is not just any middle school. It is considered a ZEP - a French acronym for a tough and needy school - and it has a high percentage of ethnic-immigrant students.

One Francoise Dolto student told French radio the film showed that students going to such difficult schools are capable of great things.

France's roughest schools have struggled against negative stereotypes. Some of their students were blamed for rioting in France's poorer, ethnic-immigrant suburbs that shook the country in 2005. Teachers and other experts often point to their low success rates.

Activists like Mouloud Aounit hope The Class will help erase these assumptions.

Aounit, who heads the French anti-discrimination group MRAP, says the film exposes the real France - a country that is complex and ethnically diverse. He says it is a diversity that is still not visible enough in politics, business, and the media.

France Education Minister Xavier Darcos has hailed the movie for testifying to the difficult conditions French teachers must often work under. But the celebrations occur during student and teacher protests of government plans to cut more than 11,000 teaching posts.

Several French schools have also been at the forefront of another movement - to prevent the government from deporting illegal immigrants who count among their student bodies. And The Class has unwittingly brought up this subject as well - one Congolese student who acted in the movie is living illegally in France.

 

Europe

  • Europe Home

  • Europe:  Colombia Defense Minister Denies Paying Ransom

  • Europe:  Polish PM Terms Unsatisfactory Latest US Offer on Missile Shield

  • Europe:  Explosion at Belarus Concert Injures At Least 50

  • Europe:  Freed Betancourt to Visit France

  • Europe:  Cyprus Ratifies EU Treaty

  • Europe:  Polish Officials Say No Firm Deal Yet on Missile Shield

  • Europe:  Turkey's Ruling Party Defending Itself in Court  

  • Europe:  Turkish Media: Police Seize Documents Containing Alleged Coup Plot

  • Europe:  Bush to Meet With Russian President During Upcoming G-8 Summit

  • Europe:  Medvedev says Russia Needs More Political Competition

  • Europe:  Trial Ordered for US Airline France Blames for Concorde Crash

  • Europe:  US Pleased With Post-Independence Progress in Kosovo

  • Europe:  US, Poland, Reach Tentative Deal on Missile Defense

  • Europe:  US Group Urges Radical Cuts in Carbon Emissions

  • Europe:  Russian President says Anti-Corruption Drive Can Be Corrupted  

  • Europe:  Turkish Media: Detained Secular Activists to be Tried on Terror Charges

  • Europe:  Report: Unemployment to Rise in OECD Countries

  • Europe:  EU Pushes Unity Government in Zimbabwe

  • Europe:  British Truckers Converge on Parliament in Latest Fuel Cost Protest

  • Europe:  British Sports Officials Hopeful About Beijing Olympic Games

  • Europe:  HRW: France's Counterterrorism Policies Violate Rights

  • Europe:  US: Focus of Missile-Defense Efforts Still on Poland

  • Europe:  Protesters Outside EU Headquarters Demand a Ban on Import of Seal Products

  • Europe:  Report Calls for Managed Mediterranean Development  

  • Europe:  New UN Peacekeeping Chief Faces Growing Challenges

  • Europe:  Mercosur Nations Strongly Criticize New EU Immigration Policy

  • Europe:  Irish Voters Scuttle Euro Treaty  

  • Europe:  Cypriot Leaders Discuss Reunification Issues  

  • Europe:  Serbia Warns UN Chief on Changes to UN Mission in Kosovo

  • Europe:  Government-Controlled Opium Production Is Way of Life in Turkey  


  • More Headlines