Ramparts of Clay

PG 6.5
1971 1 hr 20 min Drama

In an Algerian village, the workers of a salt mine go on strike because of low wages. The owner calls the army to control the men, but a young woman cuts off the water to force the troops to retreat.

  • Cast:
    Leila Shenna , Ahmed Kadri (Krikèche)

Similar titles

The Great Cognito
The Great Cognito
The film tells of a music hall impressionist who caricatures personalities from the second world war. Animated by Barry Bruce at Will Vinton Productions.
The Great Cognito 1982
Jimmy the C
Jimmy the C
President Jimmy Carter "sings" Ray Charles' "Georgia on my Mind", while thinking about his home state.
Jimmy the C 1977
Venus
Venus
An erotic comedy in claymation.
Venus 2010
The Auteur
The Auteur
Bobby's a film student, but unfortunately he doesn't have much in common with his new roommate Corb, an eccentric cinephile. Tensions rise when Corb thinks he has found not only a new best friend but also a subject for his own strange film.
The Auteur 2021
Rivers and Tides
Rivers and Tides
Portrait of Andy Goldsworthy, an artist whose specialty is ephemeral sculptures made from elements of nature.
Rivers and Tides 2001
Tengers
Tengers
Whilst working on "the great South African novel," an unemployed writer gets caught up in the harsh realities of life in the city of Johannesburg.
Tengers 2007
Ident
Ident
Explores the nature of man, not only with feet of clay, but with a face of clay as well. Within a colourless city of walls, corridors, and small rooms, a man makes his way from home to work, then to a bar, and then, by a stroke of luck, into an outdoors of space, fresh air, and colour. Along the way, he changes his face to fit his surroundings, interacts with his dog, argues with co-workers, and gossips at a bar. His altering of his visage suggests a two-faced nature, and his stepping into the outdoors provides the ultimate test of his real identity.
Ident 1991
Barefootin'
Barefootin'
Aardman's claymation to the song Barefootin'.
Barefootin' 1987
Roxanne
Roxanne
an overly dramatic romance between a pet rock named Roxanne and a handsome action figure named Dwayne. But things get complicated when Roxanne's husband gets in the way of their relationship.
Roxanne 2019
Animated Putty
Animated Putty
Stop-motion animation of putty modeling itself into faces.
Animated Putty 1911

Reviews

Console
1971/02/07

best movie i've ever seen.

... more
Pacionsbo
1971/02/08

Absolutely Fantastic

... more
Fatma Suarez
1971/02/09

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

... more
Quiet Muffin
1971/02/10

This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.

... more
runamokprods
1971/02/11

An unusual, haunting film, made in 1970 about a labor revolt in a tiny, primitive Tunisian town in the early 1960s. Slow, deliberate, with almost no dialogue at all (I don't speak French and saw a version without subtitles or narration, and felt I missed nothing) it feels much more like a beautifully photographed documentary than a narrative film. The 'plot' doesn't even start to develop until more than halfway through the film. The first half simply gives us an overview of how life in the village works through images and sounds. And even when the face off does occur, it is presented in muted, slow-moving visual strokes. Faces, and body language tell the tale as the French bring in troops to stare down the quietly dignified striking workers. A film that acknowledges there are gains that come with progress (education is clearly noted as a plus by the film), but at a high cost in terms of exploitation of the majority, and the loss of a simple and honest way of life, as generations worked the earth while living in comparative harmony with it and each other.

... more
dbdumonteil
1971/02/12

IMPORTANT:the two precedent users have probably seen the original 1969 version the soundtrack of which is minimal.The movie seems to have been restored in 2002 (?) :it features now a voice-over (Bertucelli himself)which never stops from the beginning till the end.It's at once an advantage and a disadvantage:the two posters made a very good depiction of the sounds ,and the new version spoils them a bit.On the other hand,Bertucelli literally explains the making of his movie:he had to film in Algeria cause the book was forbidden in Tunisia ,some of the parts were played by members of his crew(the schoolteacher),the Army only provides him with a vehicle and uniforms,he had to hire the inhabitants of a neighboring village.He explains almost every shot ,how he filmed it,the mistakes he made,you name it.."Remparts d'argile" (=ramparts of clay),what a beautiful title!The strength and the weakness :Bertucelli justifies his choice too.He tells us his movie is first a documentary ;then halfway it turns into a fiction (actually it's still reality).It's almost as good as Bunuel's "los hurdes" (1932) .But whereas the people of the poor Spanish village were not able to revolt ,"remparts d'argile" is the story of a double rebellion:1.Rebellion of the men abetted by women .They refuse the starvation wage which the man in suit (almost an extra-terrestrial in this context;he is played by the only professional actor of the whole film;Bertucelli tells us he was at the time a very popular comic(!) actor)gives them.2.Much more important:Rima's rebellion.She was an outcast in the village because to be an orphan seemed to be a curse.When she lets the pail fall into the well,she turns back on superstition,religion,all that prevents people from becoming emancipated.She did not learn to read in vain:she was taught by a kid,cause she had be banned from school.Ramparts of clay ,indeed ,which begin to crack."Remparts d'argile" is a very ambitious work,easily the best the director has ever done.Sometimes I wonder if it's the same man who made "docteur Françoise Gailland".Had Bertucelli continued in that vein (of "remparts d'argile,of course) ,he might have revolutionized the FRench cinema.

... more
footsperry
1971/02/13

Two years ago I saw this film for the first time. I thought it slow, and I missed dialogue. The location was interesting, though - and still the story came alive in the hands of this powerful actress. I was fascinated - and even months later, the story continued to resonate within me. The events are small. The heroism is of a human scale. The motivation for change is believable. These appear to be real people, captured so effectively by a documentary filmmaker - and yet it is a created story. If it is not factually based, it tells truth.Yes, the film is slow and deliberate, but "Ramparts of Clay" has substance. The humanity of all the actors makes them my kin - and I care about them, and what will happen to them.

... more
Zen Bones
1971/02/14

This film explores the exploitation and Sisyphus-like labor of rural people in Tunisia. The men break rocks for wages they can barely live on. The women support the men - who are considered the lowest caste in society - when they go on strike, but the film shows that there is caste lower of that of these men. The women, among their other chores, pump water from a deep well that is a long and strenuous labor. They receive no payment for their work and are limited to the confines of their tiny village. When one young, unmarried woman discovers that there is a world different from hers outside her village, she wants to leave, but she receives no support from the other villagers. This film beautifully illustrates the vast emptiness of these people's lives through the dusty, russet-colored landscape where everything is composed of either dirt, rock, or clay. Most effective though, is the piercing, squeaky sound of the rusty pump at the well. It becomes a sound of dismay and futility. If one could audibly create a sound of a prison in a wasteland, this would be it. It's been a few years since I've seen this film, but that sound still haunts me. When I think of the problems of my life, I often think back on the village in this film and others like it that still exist in many parts of the world. Movies like this should be seen by everybody.

... more