Mon oncle Antoine.1971 104m director Claude Jutra, script Clement Perron Per´ron n. 1. (Arch.) An out-of-door flight of steps, as in a garden, leading to a terrace or to an upper story; - usually applied to mediævel or later structures of some architectural pretensions. , producer Marc Beaudet, cinematographer Michel Brault, editors Claude Jutra and Claire Boyer, music Jean Cousineau; with Jean Duceppe Jean Hotte-Duceppe (October 25, 1923 - December 7, 1990) was a stage and television actor from Quebec, Canada. He founded the Compagnie de théâtre Jean Duceppe in 1973. , Jacques Gagnon, Helene Loiselle, Lionel Villeneuve, Olivette Olivette may refer to:
Claude Jutra's third feature is considered by many to be the greatest Canadian film of all time. Set in a rural Quebec mining town in the late 1940s, Mon oncle Antoine is at once a charming portrait of a mythical rural Quebec and a telling fable of Quebec at the dawn of the Quiet Revolution. This social tension between innocence and experience is given subtle dramatic form in a corning-of-age story about a 15-year-old boy, Benoit (Jacques Gagnon), who works for his uncle (Jean Duceppe), the owner of the local general store and also the town's undertaker. Aided by the excellent cinematography cinematography: see motion picture photography. cinematography Art and technology of motion-picture photography. It involves the composition of a scene, lighting of the set and actors, choice of cameras, camera angle, and integration of special of Michel Brault, we see the world through Benoit's eyes, including his first encounters with sex and death. The climactic scene, in which Benoit rides in a sleigh sleigh: see sled. with his drunken uncle and the body of a dead youth, resonates with Canadian cultural mythology, the snowstorm an indication of the tempestuous tem·pes·tu·ous adj. 1. Of, relating to, or resembling a tempest: tempestuous gales. 2. Tumultuous; stormy: a tempestuous relationship. winds of change about to come. Because the film's politics are more implicit than obvious, critical response to Mon oncle Antoine in Quebec was mixed, although it was successful both at home and abroad, and the winner of eight Canadian Film Awards. AWARDS: Canadian Film Awards--Feature Film, Director, Screenplay, Cinematography, Actor (Duceppe), Supporting Actress (Thibault), Musical Score, Overall Sound; AV Trust--Masterwork |
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