quebec

Cinéfranco 2011

Cinéfranco is Toronto’s fest­ival of films in the French lan­guage. The 14th annual fest­ival takes place for the very first time at the TIFF Bell Lightbox (with addi­tional screen­ings at the NFB Mediatheque) from March 25th through April 3rd, fea­turing films from all over the French-speaking world, with selec­tions from France, Canada (Québec, Ontario, and New Brunswick), Algeria, Morocco, Belgium, and Switzerland. All films are sub­titled in English, and tickets are avail­able at the cinema for $12 each.

This year’s fest­ival will screen 27 fea­tures, 7 doc­u­ment­aries and 10 shorts. There will also be a series of debates on various topics, and a master class with Moroccan film­maker Driss Chouika. I’ve been a big fan of this well-run fest­ival for the past sev­eral years and it def­in­itely gives you a sense of the breadth of fran­co­phone cinema. Watch for some reviews in the weeks to come and def­in­itely check out the Cinéfranco site for the schedule and a descrip­tion of the films.

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Cinéfranco 2010

Cinéfranco is Toronto’s fest­ival of films in the French lan­guage. The 13th annual fest­ival runs from March 26th through April 3rd at the AMC Yonge and Dundas Cinemas, fea­turing films from all over the French-speaking world, with films from France, Québec, Ontario, Luxembourg, Belgium, and Switzerland. All films are sub­titled in English, and tickets are avail­able at the cinema for $10 each.

This year’s fest­ival will screen 30 fea­tures and 10 shorts with a spe­cial focus on films from Switzerland. In addi­tion, the Opening Night Film, Le Divan du Monde (Everybody’s Couch), is the first fic­tional fea­ture by a fran­co­phone Ontarian dir­ector in more than 20 years.

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NFB Mediatheque

Toronto’s NFB Mediatheque (150 John St.) presents French-language films (with English sub­titles) the first Thursday of each month, in part­ner­ship with Alliance Française de Toronto, le Bureau du Québec à Toronto, Cinéfranco, the Consulate General of France in Toronto and Théâtre Français de Toronto. Each film screens with one of the NFB’s acclaimed shorts pre­ceding it, and tickets are a ridicu­lously cheap $6 for adults and $4 for stu­dents, seniors, NFB and Alliance Française mem­bers. Check out this upcoming schedule:

Thursday March 4, 2010 at 7:30pm

Persepolis

Persepolis (Directors: Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi. 2007, France, 96 minutes.)
Winner, Jury Prize, 2007 Cannes Film Festival.

The poignant story of a young girl in Iran during the Islamic Revolution, based on the award-winning graphic novel by Marjane Satrapi.

pre­ceded by
Conte de quartier (Director: Florence Miailhe. 2006, NFB, 16 minutes.)

A crazy day in a neigh­bour­hood under recon­struc­tion: seven char­ac­ters and a rag doll are swept up in a dizzying chain of events.

Thursday April 1, 2010 at 7:30pm

L'âge de Tènébres (Days of Darkness)

L’âge de Tènébres (Days of Darkness) (Director: Denys Arcand. 2007, Canada, 104 minutes.)
Nominee, Best Motion Picture, 2008 Genie Awards.

Stuck between dream and reality, a civil ser­vant rein­vents him­self as a celebrity, escaping from his quiet and des­perate life.

pre­ceded by
L’ondée (Rains) (Director: David Coquard-Dassault. 2008, NFB, 8 min.)
Jury Special Mention, Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival, 2009.

Everyone seeks refuge as a sudden rain­storm is unleashed on a city.

Thursday May 4, 2010 at 7:30pm

Entre les murs (The Class)

Entre les murs (The Class) (Director: Laurent Cantet, . 2008, France, 128 min.)
Winner, Palme d’Or, Cannes Film Festival, 2008.

A well-intentioned teacher’s classroom ethics are put to the test when his stu­dents begin to chal­lenge his methods.

pre­ceded by
Train en folie (Runaway) (Director: Cordell Barker, 2009, NFB, 9 min.)
Winner, Petit Rail d’Or for Best Short Film, Cannes International Film Festival, 2009
One of Canada’s Top Ten Films of 2009 (Short Films)

Happy pas­sen­gers have a great time on a crowded train, obli­vious to the unknown fate that awaits them around the bend.

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Maelström

by James McNally on January 21, 2010

in DVD

Maelström

Maelström (Director: Denis Villeneuve): My first exposure to Villeneuve’s work was his wickedly funny and stylish short Next Floor, and his latest fea­ture Polytechnique just won the award for Best Canadian Film of 2009 from the Toronto Film Critics Association, so I was eager to watch this film, which ori­gin­ally played to con­sid­er­able buzz at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival. I’m sorry that it took me so long to catch up with this unique film, and I can tell you that I’m going to be watching Polytechnique and every other bit of film Villeneuve has had a hand in cre­ating as soon as I can.

Maelström is the sort of auda­cious film­making that begins its tale with an untrans­lated title card in Norwegian, con­tinues with a talking fish as nar­rator, and then assaults you with the strains of “Good Morning Starshine” (from the musical Hair) over scenes of a woman having an abor­tion. And that’s just the first five minutes.

Bibiane Champagne (Marie-Josée Croze) is a suc­cessful young entre­preneur, run­ning a fash­ion­able boutique with her brother. They are the chil­dren of a famous designer, and this seems to weigh heavily on her. Weighing more heavily is the guilt she feels for the abor­tion she’s just had. After a night of partying to forget her pain, she drives drunk, hit­ting a ped­es­trian on her way home. She finds out a few days later in the news­paper that the man dragged him­self out of the road, staggered home, and died sit­ting at his kit­chen table. With her guilt now doubled, she’s dis­con­nected even fur­ther from her work and pon­ders sui­cide. Planning to ditch her car in the river, she almost drowns, but emerges from the water hoping for a second chance at life.

Her second chance arrives in the form of the son of the man she’s killed. While his father was a Norwegian fish­erman, Evian (Jean-Nicolas Verreault) is a scuba diver (or charm­ingly referred to in the sub­titles, a “frogman”), working for Hydro Quebec in the remote northern part of the province. When Bibiane is drawn to the morgue at the same time as Evian, they begin an enig­matic rela­tion­ship in which Bibiane pre­tends to be his father’s neigh­bour. Eventually the truth will come out and these two people will have to decide how to move for­ward with their lives.

Maelström has the sump­tuous visual style and mor­bidity of Peter Greenaway and the obses­sion with coin­cid­ence and weighty philo­soph­ical themes as Krzysztof Kieslowski. While that might not appeal to everyone, it’s a dream match for me, and while I caught myself a few times thinking the film was just a bit too pretty, I was solidly engrossed throughout and sat­is­fied by the conclusion.

Bold film­makers like Villeneuve are rare, and they can often make ter­rible mis­takes in judge­ment. Witness Julio Medem’s most recent film Caótica Ana (review), or Jaco van Dormael’s Mr. Nobody, both huge per­sonal dis­ap­point­ments after I’d enjoyed their earlier work. But I’m always willing to give film­makers like these another chance, hoping that failure doesn’t blunt their appetite for risk-taking. Or mine.

9/10(9/10)

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Cinéfranco 2009

Cinéfranco is Toronto’s fest­ival of films in the French lan­guage. The 12th edi­tion is run­ning from tomorrow, March 27th, through April 5th at the Royal Cinema at 608 College Street West, fea­turing films from all over the French-speaking world, with films from France, Québec, Morocco, Belgium, and Switzerland. All films are sub­titled in English, and tickets are avail­able at the cinema for $10 each.

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