• Latest
  • Trending
Kika Review

Kika Review: Manon Clavel’s Breakout Performance

Sleepless City Review

Sleepless City Review: Teenager’s Lens on a Vanishing Shantytown

Blades of Fire Day Review

Blades of Fire Review: Steel and Strategy

Romería Review

Romería Review: When Home Feels Always Just Out of Reach

Militantropos Review

Militantropos Review: Poignant Vérité in a Conflict Zone

The Disappearance Of Josef Mengele Review

The Disappearance Of Josef Mengele Review: Diehl’s Chilling Transformation

Monster Train 2 Review

Monster Train 2 Review: All Aboard for Infernal Excellence

Jodie Foster

Jodie Foster Overcomes Fear to Lead French Thriller Vie Privée at Cannes

9 hours ago
Greta Gerwig

Carey Mulligan Joins Gerwig’s Narnia Prequel as Digory’s Mother in Netflix Reboot

9 hours ago
Jesse Eisenberg

Jesse Eisenberg Wraps Third Directorial Film with Julianne Moore in Untitled Musical Comedy

9 hours ago
Tell Her That I Love Her Review 1

Tell Her That I Love Her Review: Understanding the Mothers We Barely Knew

Alejandro González Iñárritu

Iñárritu Reflects on Amores Perros at Cannes While Teasing Wild Cruise Comedy

9 hours ago
Jafar Panahi

Jafar Panahi Breaks 22-Year Cannes Absence with Clandestine Thriller

10 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Thursday, May 22, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jodie Foster

    Jodie Foster Overcomes Fear to Lead French Thriller Vie Privée at Cannes

    Greta Gerwig

    Carey Mulligan Joins Gerwig’s Narnia Prequel as Digory’s Mother in Netflix Reboot

    Jesse Eisenberg

    Jesse Eisenberg Wraps Third Directorial Film with Julianne Moore in Untitled Musical Comedy

    Alejandro González Iñárritu

    Iñárritu Reflects on Amores Perros at Cannes While Teasing Wild Cruise Comedy

    Jafar Panahi

    Jafar Panahi Breaks 22-Year Cannes Absence with Clandestine Thriller

    Milly Alcock

    Milly Alcock Leans on Former Supergirl and Coaching Advice for DCU Relaunch

    Caught Stealing

    Austin Butler’s Chaotic Descent in Darren Aronofsky’s Crime Caper

    Chief of War

    Jason Momoa Unveils Epic Teaser for Hawaiian War Drama Chief of War

    Platonic Season 2

    Platonic Season 2 to Premiere August 6 on Apple TV+

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Sleepless City Review

    Sleepless City Review: Teenager’s Lens on a Vanishing Shantytown

    Romería Review

    Romería Review: When Home Feels Always Just Out of Reach

    Militantropos Review

    Militantropos Review: Poignant Vérité in a Conflict Zone

    The Disappearance Of Josef Mengele Review

    The Disappearance Of Josef Mengele Review: Diehl’s Chilling Transformation

    Kika Review

    Kika Review: Manon Clavel’s Breakout Performance

    Tell Her That I Love Her Review 1

    Tell Her That I Love Her Review: Understanding the Mothers We Barely Knew

    Love Me Tender Review

    Love Me Tender Review: Vicky Krieps in a Battle for Selfhood

    Lilo & Stitch Review

    Lilo & Stitch Review: A Live-Action Love Letter to Family

    It Was Just an Accident Review

    It Was Just an Accident Review: Panahi’s Dark Road of Justice

  • Game Reviews
    Blades of Fire Day Review

    Blades of Fire Review: Steel and Strategy

    Monster Train 2 Review

    Monster Train 2 Review: All Aboard for Infernal Excellence

    Deliver At All Costs Review

    Deliver At All Costs Review: Physics-Driven Mayhem

    Deck of Haunts Review

    Deck of Haunts Review: Reverse-Horror at Its Best

    RoadCraft Review

    RoadCraft Review: Mastering Mud, Metal, and Mighty Machines

    FREERIDE Review

    FREERIDE Review: Pastel Worlds and Emotional Echoes

    Among Us 3D Review

    Among Us 3D Review: First-Person Fun That Falls Short

    Wizordum Review

    Wizordum Review – Retro FPS Recharged

    La Quimera Review

    La Quimera Review: A Dystopian Disappointment

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jodie Foster

    Jodie Foster Overcomes Fear to Lead French Thriller Vie Privée at Cannes

    Greta Gerwig

    Carey Mulligan Joins Gerwig’s Narnia Prequel as Digory’s Mother in Netflix Reboot

    Jesse Eisenberg

    Jesse Eisenberg Wraps Third Directorial Film with Julianne Moore in Untitled Musical Comedy

    Alejandro González Iñárritu

    Iñárritu Reflects on Amores Perros at Cannes While Teasing Wild Cruise Comedy

    Jafar Panahi

    Jafar Panahi Breaks 22-Year Cannes Absence with Clandestine Thriller

    Milly Alcock

    Milly Alcock Leans on Former Supergirl and Coaching Advice for DCU Relaunch

    Caught Stealing

    Austin Butler’s Chaotic Descent in Darren Aronofsky’s Crime Caper

    Chief of War

    Jason Momoa Unveils Epic Teaser for Hawaiian War Drama Chief of War

    Platonic Season 2

    Platonic Season 2 to Premiere August 6 on Apple TV+

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Sleepless City Review

    Sleepless City Review: Teenager’s Lens on a Vanishing Shantytown

    Romería Review

    Romería Review: When Home Feels Always Just Out of Reach

    Militantropos Review

    Militantropos Review: Poignant Vérité in a Conflict Zone

    The Disappearance Of Josef Mengele Review

    The Disappearance Of Josef Mengele Review: Diehl’s Chilling Transformation

    Kika Review

    Kika Review: Manon Clavel’s Breakout Performance

    Tell Her That I Love Her Review 1

    Tell Her That I Love Her Review: Understanding the Mothers We Barely Knew

    Love Me Tender Review

    Love Me Tender Review: Vicky Krieps in a Battle for Selfhood

    Lilo & Stitch Review

    Lilo & Stitch Review: A Live-Action Love Letter to Family

    It Was Just an Accident Review

    It Was Just an Accident Review: Panahi’s Dark Road of Justice

  • Game Reviews
    Blades of Fire Day Review

    Blades of Fire Review: Steel and Strategy

    Monster Train 2 Review

    Monster Train 2 Review: All Aboard for Infernal Excellence

    Deliver At All Costs Review

    Deliver At All Costs Review: Physics-Driven Mayhem

    Deck of Haunts Review

    Deck of Haunts Review: Reverse-Horror at Its Best

    RoadCraft Review

    RoadCraft Review: Mastering Mud, Metal, and Mighty Machines

    FREERIDE Review

    FREERIDE Review: Pastel Worlds and Emotional Echoes

    Among Us 3D Review

    Among Us 3D Review: First-Person Fun That Falls Short

    Wizordum Review

    Wizordum Review – Retro FPS Recharged

    La Quimera Review

    La Quimera Review: A Dystopian Disappointment

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Kika Review

Jodie Foster Overcomes Fear to Lead French Thriller Vie Privée at Cannes

Monster Train 2 Review: All Aboard for Infernal Excellence

Home Entertainment Movies

Kika Review: Manon Clavel’s Breakout Performance

Caleb Anderson by Caleb Anderson
9 hours ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

Kika (2025), the debut feature from Alexe Poukine, marks a bold transition from her award-winning shorts and documentaries into narrative cinema. Set against the urban backdrop of Brussels, the film introduces us to Kika, a dedicated social worker whose days are filled with visits to underfunded shelters and meetings with clients on the edge. A seemingly lighthearted meet-cute in a closing-time bike shop sparks a passionate affair with the owner, David, upending her stable—but emotionally restrained—family life.

When tragedy strikes and Kika finds herself widowed and pregnant, the film pivots sharply. Poukine shifts from romantic warmth to a grounded social-realist portrait of economic desperation: a single mother grappling with debts and the looming specter of social housing waitlists.

Moments of tenderness—shared breakfasts with her daughter, laughter with newfound friends—sit alongside scenes of moral reckoning as Kika invents unorthodox ways to stay afloat. This calibrated balance of light and shadow sets the stage for a story that continually surprises, inviting viewers to question how far one might go when every option seems closed.

Story & Themes

Act I opens with everyday routines: Kika cycling through rain-slicked streets, offering a compassionate ear to hers and others’ suffering. That routine is disrupted when she becomes trapped overnight in the bike shop with David. Their chemistry—captured in lingering close-ups and a plaintive tenor saxophone motif—propels her into an extramarital romance that feels both inevitable and fraught.

Kika Review

Act II fractures Kika’s new life. After David’s sudden death, her financial safety net vanishes. Faced with mounting bills and a daughter to feed, she recalls a client’s offhand remark about selling soiled garments for fast cash. This step into informal sex work is portrayed without sensationalism: awkward first exchanges, whispered instructions from a seasoned dominatrix mentor, and the polite curiosity of clients form a montage of survival.

Act III deepens the film’s social commentary. Kika experiments with dominatrix roles—exploring power dynamics she once witnessed only as a helper. Here, economic necessity and personal agency intersect: each session becomes a way to process grief, sublimate anger, and reclaim control over her body. Poukine weaves these scenes into a critique of Belgium’s precarious support systems—highlighting long housing waitlists and the undervaluing of care work—while probing how grief can catalyze radical reinvention.

Characters & Performances

Manon Clavel’s portrayal of Kika is a master class in restrained emotion. Her freckles-flecked face registers every flicker of uncertainty: a quiver of the lip, a flash of curiosity in her eyes. This “deer-in-headlights” innocence amplifies the shock of each tonal shift, inviting us to share her bewilderment and resolve.

Kika Review

Makita Samba’s David serves as both romantic ideal and tragic catalyst. His warm, easy smile and gentle manner establish him as a safe harbor—making his abrupt exit all the more devastating. Suzanne Elbaz, as Louison, embodies youthful steadiness. Silent but attentive, her presence underscores what Kika stands to lose if she missteps.

Among the supporting cast, Thomas Coumans’s ex-husband offers a quiet contrast: a steady, if distant, reminder of Kika’s former life. Anaël Snoek’s Rasha brings gravitas and wry humor as Kika’s dominatrix guide, teaching her the etiquette and emotional boundaries of another world. Brief vignettes with various clients—each with their own peculiar desires—reveal the breadth of human longing and test Kika’s evolving comfort zone. Together, these performances enrich themes of empathy, power exchange, and self-discovery.

Direction, Style & Technical Craft

Poukine’s documentary background infuses Kika with an immediacy that eschews polish for authenticity. Hand-held camerawork and natural light lend each frame a lived-in texture. Moments of introspection are often punctuated by abrupt fades to black, allowing emotional beats to linger uncomfortably.

Kika Review

Cinematographer Pierre Desprats captures Brussels not as a postcard city but as a network of worn facades and cramped apartments. The jazz-tinged score—dominated by tenor saxophone—underscores Kika’s shifting moods, from the flutter of new love to the tense hush of secret rendezvous. Editing choices signal tonal turns: a crisp cut when Kika confesses her affair, a slower rhythm as she navigates the dominatrix community.

Genre conventions interplay throughout: rom-com pastel hues give way to gritty realism, then to charged erotic drama. Costuming underscores this duality—Kika’s muted social-worker wardrobe contrasts sharply with the stark latex and leather of her rented dominatrix uniforms.

In key sequences—particularly her first full-duty session—Pou­kine layers close-in framing with diegetic sound (clicks of heels, measured breathing) to heighten tension. These elements cohere into a filmic language that is precise yet daring, marking Kika as both a technical achievement and an emotionally potent journey.

Kika had its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival in the Critics’ Week section on May 16, 2025, and is scheduled for theatrical release in Belgium on June 25, 2025.

Full Credits

Director: Alexe Poukine

Writers: Alexe Poukine, Thomas Van Zuylen

Producers: Benoît Roland, Alexandre Perrier, François-Pierre Clavel

Cast: Manon Clavel (as Kika), Ethelle Gonzalez Lardued, Makita Samba, Suzanne Elbaz, Anaël Snoek, Thomas Coumans, Kadija Leclere, Bernard Blancan

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Colin Lévêque

Editor: Agnès Bruckert

Composer: Pierre Desprats

The Review

Kika

8 Score

Kika proves a striking first feature for Alexe Poukine, blending raw emotion with unsparing realism. Manon Clavel’s empathetic performance anchors a story of loss, reinvention and the power of agency under pressure. Technical precision—handheld framing, jazz inflections and seamless tonal shifts—supports a thoughtful exploration of grief and desire.

PROS

  • Manon Clavel’s nuanced, expressive lead performance
  • Seamless shifts between lighthearted and intense tones
  • Authentic portrayal of economic hardship in Brussels
  • Jazz-inflected score that underscores emotional beats
  • Thoughtful use of handheld camerawork and natural light

CONS

  • Occasional underdevelopment of side characters
  • Some viewers may find the erotic scenes unsettling
  • Pacing dips during the transition into sex-work sequences
  • Limited backstory for Kika’s personal history
  • Abrupt tonal turn in the final act

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: 2025 Cannes Film FestivalAlexe PoukineAnaël SnoekBernard BlancanDramaEthelle Gonzalez LarduedFeaturedKadija LeclereKidamKiKaMakita SambaManon ClavelSuzanne ElbazThomas CoumansWrong Men
Previous Post

Jodie Foster Overcomes Fear to Lead French Thriller Vie Privée at Cannes

Next Post

Monster Train 2 Review: All Aboard for Infernal Excellence

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Pillion Review

    Pillion Review: A Bold Study in Submissive Self-Discovery

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Top 40 Richest Football Club Owners in the World

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Duster Season 1 Review: High-Octane Caper in the Southwest

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Everyone Is Going to Die Review: When Privilege Meets Retribution

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Sons of the Neon Night Review: Brothers at War in Neon Shadows

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reedland Review: Slow-Burn Mystery Amid Dutch Wetlands

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Chronology of Water Review: Survival in Every Stroke

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Blades of Fire Day Review
Reviews Games

Blades of Fire Review: Steel and Strategy

1 hour ago
Monster Train 2 Review
Games

Monster Train 2 Review: All Aboard for Infernal Excellence

8 hours ago
Lilo & Stitch Review
Movies

Lilo & Stitch Review: A Live-Action Love Letter to Family

14 hours ago
Motorheads Season 1 Review
TV Shows

Motorheads Season 1 Review: Rust Belt Roots and Revved Engines

1 day ago
Eleanor the Great Review
Movies

Eleanor the Great Review: June Squibb’s Defiant Masterclass

1 day ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version