Welcome back to Bad Dads Film Review! This week we’re diving deep into the underworld of cinematic mentorship and criminal patronage with our Top 5 Godfathers (but no, not that Godfather), followed by a look at Jacques Audiard’s powerful crime drama, A Prophet (2009). Grit, transformation, and the shadows of paternal influence are the order of the day.
🧑🦲 Top 5 Godfathers (but not The one)
🎬 Main Review: A Prophet (2009)
Jacques Audiard’s A Prophet (Un Prophète) is a blistering French prison drama that explores the transformation of an illiterate, mixed-ethnicity 19-year-old named Malik El Djebena (Tahar Rahim) into a calculating and powerful player in the criminal world.
Sentenced to six years in prison, Malik begins as a naïve, vulnerable inmate who quickly becomes ensnared in the orbit of the Corsican mafia. Forced to commit murder early on, he becomes the reluctant pawn of César Luciani (Niels Arestrup), a domineering Corsican godfather-type figure who rules the prison's power structure. Over time, Malik learns the language, the politics, and the trade, gradually carving out a space of influence for himself — sometimes through grit, sometimes through shocking brutality.
A Prophet is a film about survival, assimilation, and the birth of a new kind of power. Malik’s journey isn’t just one of criminal evolution — it’s a searing indictment of institutional failure and a meditation on how the oppressed can learn to wield the tools of their oppressors. It’s also one of the most compelling character arcs in modern crime cinema.
So join us as we trace the power dynamics of godfathers in media and witness the rise of an unlikely prophet in one of Europe’s finest crime fil
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