Dark Inclusion (2016) Poster

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6/10
small French noir
SnoopyStyle17 December 2016
Pier Ulmann cases houses and works with Rachid in break-ins. His estranged father Victor dies penniless. Victor mangled his hand while cutting a diamond for the family business and then lost his inheritance to his brother Joseph. After the funeral, Pier's cousin Gabi offers him a job renovating the diamond office. Gabi is trying to push the business into a bigger wholesaler buying from Vijay Sha Gopal's cutting operation. Joseph vehemently disagrees and tries to buy Rick De Vries' cutting operation to work on boutique specialty large stones. Pier sees the opportunity to case the office and avenge his father. He infiltrates the family business and befriends Gabi's boxing wife Luisa.

This is an intriguing noirish story but director Arthur Harari needs a more stylish flair. The most memorable scene is killing a pigeon. The movie starts off with a bloody scene. That may have raised my expectations but it doesn't maintain that intensity. The lead is reserved for the most part due to the story. It's not really a caper movie or a thriller. It's a family dysfunction movie.
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7/10
Another decent movie from Belgium.
deloudelouvain1 February 2021
Diamant Noir (or Dark Inclusion for the English title) is shot in Antwerpen in my home country Belgium. I recognized a lot of places where they shot some scenes. It's an enjoyable movie to watch, never boring, with a good story that keeps you interested in the movie. I wouldn't really categorize it as a thriller even though there are some revenge thoughts going on, but more a drama. The whole cast did a good job playing their respective characters. For Hafed Benotman it was only his third movie but he died before the movie was released. The movie is mostly in French, but there are also some German, Dutch and English passages, what perfectly normal is for Belgium as most of the people there speak at least two if not three or four languages. Diamant Noir is one of those movies that won't make it to a big public but it deserves a wider audience. Another good Belgian production.
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Diamonds are forever
searchanddestroy-111 June 2016
This film partly from Belgium is a vengeance tale. A young man decides to avenge the death of his father, which he knows has been provoked by his uncle, the deceased's brother: a diamond broker in Antwerp. So our lead plans his vengeance, helped by a couple of hoodlums of his acquaintance. This feature is not a masterpiece but a well made like TV movie piece of work. I found it maybe a bit too long however. Just note the presence in the cast of Ahmed Benoman, a sort of Edward Bunker. An ex con and also novelist, writer of authentic tales of despair, violence and brutality. A man who unfortunately died just after the shooting of this movie. He plays here the Rachid character, a hoodlum. His performance is outstanding, especially in the scene where he kills a pigeon, only to show the lead character what it makes to kill. A so powerful scene. A good little film.
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