Intouchables - French Movie
And that’s precisely why Philippe hires him.
The film’s title is a double-edged sword. In French, Intouchables refers to the Dalit caste in India—the "untouchables." But here, it takes on a delicious irony. Both men are untouchable in their own worlds: Philippe by his disability and wealth, Driss by his poverty and race. Together, they become each other’s ladder out of isolation. intouchables french movie
Upon release, The Intouchables became the second-highest-grossing French film of all time (behind only Welcome to the Sticks ). It was nominated for a BAFTA for Best Foreign Language Film and won Omar Sy the César Award for Best Actor—the first Black recipient of the award. It was later remade in Hollywood as The Upside (2017), but critics agreed the original’s raw, Gallic charm was impossible to duplicate. And that’s precisely why Philippe hires him
At first glance, the premise of the 2011 French film The Intouchables sounds like a recipe for disaster: a wealthy, white, tetraplegic aristocrat hires a poor, young, Black ex-convict from the housing projects to be his live-in caregiver. It’s a setup that could easily tumble into cliché or, worse, uncomfortable stereotype. Yet, what directors Olivier Nakache and Éric Toledano delivered is one of the most unexpectedly joyful, irreverent, and deeply human films of the 21st century. Both men are untouchable in their own worlds: