logo
Allo la France review – romance of French phone booths exposes funding cuts to rural services

Allo la France review – romance of French phone booths exposes funding cuts to rural services

The Guardian23-06-2025
The humble telephone box, a souvenir from the days of analogue, can also be an intriguing cinematic locus. Floriane Devigne's road trip documentary begins with such a relic: the last public phone booth in Paris, which also appears in Jacques Rivette's mesmerising 1981 film Le Pont du Nord. Unlike their Instagrammable British counterparts, French phone boxes are usually painted in a demure grey and blend seamlessly with their surroundings.
As it moves from the capital city to more remote areas, Devigne's film observes the vanishing of a formerly essential utility as her cross-country odyssey sparkles with an endearing whimsicality. Instead of using talking heads, Devigne ducks into various phone boxes scattered across France, as she takes calls from her interview subjects. Stories of love and longing fill these unassuming booths, themselves once the location of secret rendezvous and romantic trysts. The interiors of these facilities are now caked with dirt and graffiti; the lovers of yore are long gone.
In one of these booths, Devigne reads out graffitied slogans supporting the far-right National Rally and politician Marine Le Pen. It soon transpires that the disappearance of the phone boxes is just one symptom of a larger issue: funding cuts for public services in rural France. With state hospitals and schools closing down, local frustrations towards Macron's policies morph into worryingly divisive rhetoric.
Devigne's talent for moving from a specific object to larger socio-political issues turns what could have been a nostalgia-heavy film into a clear-eyed examination of contemporary legislation and its consequences. With the past squarely in its rearview mirror, Allo la France looks towards the future, sounding an urgent warning about the disintegration of public amenities.
Allo la France is on True Story from 27 June
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Welsh Government ministers to skip Wales Euros match as row erupts
Welsh Government ministers to skip Wales Euros match as row erupts

Wales Online

time4 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Welsh Government ministers to skip Wales Euros match as row erupts

Welsh Government ministers to skip Wales Euros match as row erupts 'This match is not only a significant sporting event, but also a moment of national pride,' the letter read. It's a massive tournament for Wales and as it stands there will be no government official at a pivotal match in Switzerland. (Image: Huw Evans Picture Agency Ltd ) A letter has been written to the Welsh government after it was revealed there would be no ministers present at Wales' second-ever match at the Women's European Championships. Wales get their first-ever Euros under way on Saturday, July 5, with a tough match against Netherlands in Lucerne, Switzerland. It is a landmark moment in the history of football in Wales. ‌ First Minister Eluned Morgan will be present in that match, but right now, there will be no one from the Welsh government attending the second game against France in St Gallen next week. ‌ Culture Minister Jack Sargeant is attending the third and final group game against England on July 13. Delyth Jewell, who is chairwoman of the culture committee, has now written a letter to the First Minister herself, expressing her "deep disappointment" that the Welsh government will not be in attendance. "Dear First Minister," began Jewell. Article continues below "I write on behalf of the Committee to express our deep disappointment at the absence of ministerial representation at the Women's Euros fixture between Wales and France on 9 July 2025. "This match is not only a significant sporting event, but also a moment of national pride. We are advised that the Prime Minister is attending England's fixture, and the President of France is expected to support his national team in person. "The lack of Welsh Government representation risks conveying that our women's team is not afforded the same recognition or support as others on the international stage. ‌ "We urge you to reconsider this position as a matter of urgency. A visible ministerial presence would demonstrate the Welsh Government's commitment to gender equality in sport and its support for our national athletes. "Would you kindly confirm whether a minister will now be attending the match to provide the visible support our team deserves and to ensure that Wales is proudly represented on this important international stage?" The Welsh government said: "Qualification for the women's Euros is an outstanding achievement and an inspiration to generations of female footballers in Wales. ‌ "We wish our national team the very best of luck and thank them for all they are doing to represent Wales on the international stage." This tournament is not only a massive moment for women's football in Wales, but for Welsh football as a whole. Nine years ago in Euro 2016, it was 'Together Stronger' that symbolised the men's team's historic appearance in the Euros. This time around, it's 'For us, for them, for her', with an eye on inspiring a new generation of female footballers. Article continues below Speaking ahead of the team announcement, manager Rhian Wilkinson said: "I feel pride. I think of young girls like I was, watching their brothers play, not having the same chances. That's changing now. This team is changing football in Wales. No one outside expects much of us at the Euros—but inside? We believe. No fear. Just ambition and unity." Wales' second group game against France kicks off at 8pm UK time on July 9 in St Gallen.

This Gaza film is impossible to review because I don't know who to believe anymore
This Gaza film is impossible to review because I don't know who to believe anymore

Telegraph

time5 hours ago

  • Telegraph

This Gaza film is impossible to review because I don't know who to believe anymore

Gaza: Doctors Under Attack (Channel 4) is the documentary commissioned but then dropped by the BBC – a rare example of the corporation smelling potential disaster. It aired last night on Channel 4 instead. Hardly anyone cares about Channel 4, so its impact will now be minimal. But the impact of the BBC's handling of this, and of their Gaza documentary that went before it – Gaza: How To Survive A War Zone, in which the child narrator was later revealed to be the son of a Hamas minister – will endure. It makes this film almost impossible to review, because you now wonder if you should trust what you are being told. Undeniably, the film is harrowing and shocking. It contains unbearably distressing scenes of children's suffering: a boy sobbing over the body of his father, a little girl on an operating table after the skin had been flayed from her torso. Gaza is hell on earth, and the documentary showed us this in graphic terms. You can see these images on television news reports, but they are brief. An hour of them is hard to endure. It is the central claims of the film that the BBC found too difficult to handle. They are a) that Israel is detaining, torturing and, in some cases, deliberately killing Israeli doctors and hospital workers, targeting them at work and at home; and b) that Israel is systematically crippling Gaza's hospitals as part of an overall plan to destroy Gaza. There is a playbook, the film says: attack the hospital and its surroundings with air strikes, besiege the building with ground troops and block medical supplies, detain medical staff, then withdraw troops and leave behind a non-functioning shell of a building. Move on to the next hospital and repeat. The documentary builds a pretty convincing picture of this. Doctors spoke of torture and imprisonment, while mobile phone footage captured chilling scenes, including Israeli soldiers allegedly raping a prisoner inside the notorious Sde Teiman prison (nine soldiers were arrested last year). An Amnesty International worker told of Israeli 'black sites' where men are detained without judicial oversight, alongside disturbing images of prisoners; she also declared that Israel was acting 'with genocidal intent' against the Palestinian healthcare system. Israel, according to the film's many disclaimers, denies all of the allegations made. The programme was hampered, as is all coverage of Gaza, by Israel's refusal to let foreign journalists in. It claims to be a 'forensic investigation,' but in the circumstances, that just isn't possible. An Israeli whistleblower, his face hidden, claimed to have worked as a doctor at a field hospital and to have witnessed a detainee being treated without anaesthetic as 'retribution' for October 7. This is grim. You think: was this a one-off or widespread? The Israeli government maintains that Hamas uses hospitals as part of its military strategy, and that some medical staff have treated Israeli hostages. Reporter Ramita Navai tells us that two of the doctors whose stories were featured here had expressed support for the October 7 attacks, although she omits to share the words. She asks one doctor if he ever treated hostages, and he insists that he didn't but equivocates on the wider point, saying 'even if doctors in other hospitals… dealt with the hostages and treated them, does that mean for saving the life of a hostage or treating one you should be killed or interrogated?' But some things are not in doubt. Doctors in Gaza are working under horrendous conditions, often without electricity, water and basic supplies, trying to save lives. Children in Gaza are living in unimaginable misery. On that, at least, the evidence is clear.

French foreign minister denounces spy charges against couple imprisoned in Iran
French foreign minister denounces spy charges against couple imprisoned in Iran

The Independent

time6 hours ago

  • The Independent

French foreign minister denounces spy charges against couple imprisoned in Iran

France's foreign minister denounced spy charges reportedly being used to hold two French nationals in Iran for more than three years, saying the allegations are 'unjustified and unfounded." French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot on Thursday said France had not been formerly notified by Iranian authorities of the charges against French citizens Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris, which reportedly include spying for Israel. If confirmed, France would consider the charges 'totally unjustified and unfounded,' Barrot said, calling for the couple's 'immediate, unconditional release.' Kohler, 40, and her partner Paris, 72, were arrested in May 2022 and until last month were detained at Tehran 's Evin Prison, known for holding dual nationals and Westerners who are used by Iran as bargaining chips in diplomatic negotiations. A French diplomat was able to meet the pair earlier this week as their families demanded proof they were alive following recent Israeli strikes on the prison. Kohler's sister, Noemie Kohler, said in an interview broadcast Thursday on BFM TV that the couple were told they had been charged with spying for Israel, conspiracy to overthrow the Iranian regime and 'corruption on Earth.' 'Our understanding … is that they face death penalty,' she said. 'We're really extremely worried about their psychological state and the trauma of the bombings.' The visit by the French diplomat took place at a prison south of Tehran but, like some other prisoners, Kohler and Paris were transferred from Evin following the Israeli strikes and their location is unknown, Noemie Kohler said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store