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The Minister

The Minister
The Minister.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Pierre Schoeller
Produced by André Bouvard
Written by Pierre Schoeller
Starring Olivier Gourmet
Michel Blanc
Zabou Breitman
Cinematography Julien Hirsch
Release date
  • 21 May 2011 (2011-05-21) (Cannes)
  • 21 October 2011 (2011-10-21) (France)
  • 2 November 2011 (2011-11-02) (Belgium)
Running time
115 minutes
Country France
Belgium
Language French
Budget $6.5 million
Box office $6.9 million

The Minister (French: L'Exercice de l'État) is a 2011 French-Belgian drama film directed by Pierre Schöller.

The French government plans to privatize some train stations. Transport minister Bertrand Saint-Jean is supposed to be a major actor of this reform, but neither he nor his friend and assistant Gilles approves the plan. Popular opinion also disapproves of privatization.

However, Bertrand doesn't want to oppose the Prime Minister. While his staff oppose the reform, Bertrand hopes the president will provide a watered-down reform to end popular protest. The Prime Minister promises the first step will only consist of five secondary train stations. Bertrand suffers so much from pressure that he has a nightmare in which he commits suicide after reading the five stations are the most prestigious in all of France.

Finally, when Bertrand thought all his staff would abandon him, Gilles ensures him he will stay to help Bertrand negotiate the reform into something acceptable.

In the end, the President intervenes himself to arbitrate. But contrary to Bertrand's hopes, he has no intention of softening the reform. Bertrand clearly noticed that he has no say in the reform details; his mission is to implement them to the letter while reassuring opponents. Even worse, the Prime Minister and President selected a new generation of assistants for Bertrand in this mission, explicitly ordering Gilles to be fired.

Bertrand silently accepts these orders. The film ends as he walks out of the President's office hiding how heartbreaking these orders are.

It premiered in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Un Certain Regard FIPRESCI Award. It received four Magritte Award nominations, winning three, including Best Foreign Film in Coproduction and Best Actor for Olivier Gourmet.


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