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12th May 2018
01:10pm BST

Throughout the film, Malik’s neither glorified nor demonised. He's an enigma that's everything to everybody and yet, he still manages to be his own man.
Granted, we're treated to the cliched images of tattooed convicts lifting weights, getting into fights and protecting their terrain, but Malik is clever enough to realise that in order to survive prison, you need to see two steps ahead and know what's lurking around the corner.
Earning trust, keeping connections and being resourceful can be far more valuable in prison than anything else. On the outside, Malik was shy, nervous and passive. After being sent to prison, he learns how to observe, how to read people, how to plot and ultimately, how to rise.
This being said, the film doesn't shy away from depicting violence but unlike other films in the genre, A Prophet uses violence as a defining characteristic for its main protagonist.
After brutally killing someone with a razor blade, Malik is haunted by images of this man and in those moments, he constantly has to justify and question his own morality. The gore and violence is never sensationalised though and Malik remains the antithesis to the usual image of machismo and bravado that exists in these films.
A Prophet is dripping with themes of spirituality, immortality, ambition and symbolism - one scene with a deer is poetic - but aside from this, it's a bloody good drama that won the Cannes Film Festival's Prize Un Certain Regard Award.
On this week's episode of The Big Reviewski, the JOE panel discussed their favourite foreign-language films (4 min mark) and in my own view, now is the perfect time to reflect on the brilliance of A Prophet.
As Rolling Stone said in their review "A Prophet is a new crime classic" while USA Today called it "a compelling piece of naturalistic filmmaking, claustrophobic and thought-provoking."
There have been plans to remake the film in the English language - Michael B. Jordan and Josh Brolin were linked to Sam Raimi's remake - but if you haven't seen the original yet, we strongly urge you to do so here.
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