Abandoned by his father, a young boy is left in the hands of an unqualified childcare provider.
Ratings
Curator score: 9.5/10
IMDb: 7.4/10
Rotten Tomatoes: 96%
Metacritic: 87
TMDB: 7.1/10
Director
Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne
Production
France 2 Cinéma, Lucky Red, Les Films du Fleuve, Archipel 33>35, Belgacom TV, RTBF
Cast
Cécile de France, Thomas Doret, Jérémie Renier, Fabrizio Rongione, Olivier Gourmet, Egon Di Mateo, Baptiste Sornin, Samuel De Rijk, Myriem Akheddiou
Where to watch
AMC+, Philo, Sundance Now
Curator Review
Verdict
A spare, emotionally precise drama about abandonment, attachment, and the stubborn hope of being chosen. It’s less about plot than about the painful work of care, and the Dardennes make that feel immediate and humane.
Best for
Viewers who like naturalistic, handheld social dramas
Fans of films about troubled children and makeshift families
People who appreciate restrained emotion over melodrama
Anyone drawn to European art cinema with a strong moral center
Skip if
You want a fast-paced or plot-heavy story
You prefer overt sentimentality or clear-cut redemption arcs
You dislike bleak, realist filmmaking
You need a movie with lots of dialogue or stylistic flourish
Overview
The Kid with a Bike is the kind of film that looks simple on paper and ends up feeling devastatingly exact. The Dardennes strip the story down to a child’s urgent need for love, then observe how that need collides with selfishness, kindness, and the limits of adulthood. The result is a drama that never begs for tears but earns them anyway.
Worth noting
What makes it so effective is the refusal to turn Cyril into an easy victim. He’s difficult, impulsive, and often hard to like, which gives the film real tension and keeps its compassion from feeling sentimental. The camera stays close, the performances stay natural, and every small gesture carries weight.
Bottom line
This is a film about repair that understands repair is rarely neat. It finds tenderness in unlikely places and never pretends that care can erase damage overnight. If you respond to rigorous realism and emotionally honest storytelling, it’s one of the Dardennes’ strongest works.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Matt Shiverdecker (2.5★) · 318 likes
Was "The Insufferable Twat With A Bike" taken? I spent 90% of this movie hoping this little fucker would get hit by a car.
Lucy (3★) · 225 likes
the kid sure did..... have a bike
˗ˏˋ suspirliam ˊˎ˗ (4★) · 186 likes
can confirm the kid had a bike
Jonny (4★) · 133 likes
Second Dardenne film, second time being extremely impressed.
Perspective filmaking at it's finest. Perhaps the greatest strength of The Kid with a Bike is how sympathy is never forced. In most movies Cyril would be portrayed as an sympathetic figure in order to get us invested in his plight. Here though, loving him is hard. He has a temper, he goes out of his way to get into trouble, and he is especially callous to those who try to help… more
2017 · Drama · 1h 52m · R · Curator 9.1/10 (1.1M ratings) · Where to watch: Max
A vivid, child-height view of instability, with warmth and pain coexisting in the margins.
Topics
social realism, handheld cinematography, coming-of-age, family drama, European art cinema, bleak but tender, working-class life, emotional restraint, child protagonist, moral complexity