A masterpiece of social thriller. Do not watch it expecting hope. Watch it because you need to understand why the hope ran out.
Where Hugo’s novel ends with Valjean dying in peace, forgiven by Cosette, Ly’s film offers no catharsis. It offers only the concrete, the drone, and the flame. In 2019, Ladj Ly took the most beloved title in French literature and turned it into an indictment. Les Misérables are still here. They are still angry. And they are still waiting for justice that never comes. los miserables 2019
Set not in the barricades of post-Napoleonic Paris, but in the housing projects of Montfermeil—the very place where Hugo set the home of the Thénardiers—Ly’s film is a powder keg of social realism, police brutality, and simmering communal rage. This is not a musical. There is no singing, no soaring redemption arc. There is only the concrete jungle, the drone’s eye view, and the slow, inexorable countdown to a riot. Ly, a director who grew up in the same Montfermeil estates he films, structures the narrative like a classical tragedy with three clear acts, mirroring the triptych of Hugo’s original novel: Fantine, Cosette, and Marius. A masterpiece of social thriller
In 2019, a film simply titled Les Misérables arrived not as another adaptation of Victor Hugo’s 1862 novel, but as a devastating correction to it. Ladj Ly’s debut feature—nominated for an Oscar and winner of the Jury Prize at Cannes—borrows the title of France’s great humanist epic to ask a harrowing question: What if Jean Valjean’s France never really changed? Where Hugo’s novel ends with Valjean dying in