A Life Begins
A Life Begins (French: Une vie qui commence) is a 2010 Canadian French language drama film, directed and written by Michel Monty, his debut long feature.[1] The film's original working title was Cent milliards de neuronnes ("One Hundred Billion Neurons").[2]
A Life Begins | |
---|---|
French | Une vie qui commence |
Directed by | Michel Monty |
Produced by | Pierre Even Josée Vallée |
Written by | Michel Monty |
Starring | Julie Le Breton Raymond Cloutier Rita Lafontaine François Papineau Charles-Antoine Perreault |
Production company | Cirrus Communications Item 7 |
Distributed by | Alliance Vivafilm |
Release date |
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Country | Canada |
Language | French |
Plot
Following the death of his doctor father (François Papineau) from an overdose of prescription drugs in the 1960s, 12-year-old Étienne (Charles-Antoine Perreault) starts down the same path in an obsessive attempt to both replace and honor his memory.[3]
Cast
- Charles-Antoine Perreault: Étienne Langevin (the son)
- François Papineau: Jacques Langevin (father)
- Julie Le Breton: Louise Langevin (mother)
- Raymond Cloutier: Guy Langevin (grandfather)
- Rita Lafontaine: grandmother
- Juliette Vermes-Monty:Marie-Ève
- Mathis Brisson: Martin
- Éliane Préfontaine: Patricia
- Étienne Soucy-Lord: Michel Meilleur
- Yves Sauvé: Michel Monty
Awards
The film received six Jutra Award nominations at the 14th Jutra Awards in 2012, for Best Actor (Perreault), Best Actress (Le Breton), Best Supporting Actor (Papineau), Best Costume Design (Ginette Magny), Best Hair (Martin Lapointe) and Best Makeup (Diane Simard).[4]
References
- "C'est la première du film Une vie qui commence". Ici Radio-Canada, January 11, 2011.
- "Cent milliards de neurones offre les années 1960 sans nostalgie". Métro, October 30, 2009.
- Brendan Kelly, "Flick exploring loss of loved one mines noir vein". Montreal Gazette, January 21, 2011.
- Odile Tremblay, "Monsieur Lazhar, Coteau rouge et Café de Flore dominent la course à la 14e Soirée des Jutra". Le Devoir, February 1, 2012.