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{{Short description|Canadian film director (1959–2023)}} | |||
{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| name = Carole Laganière | | name = Carole Laganière | ||
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Born and raised in the ] quarter of ],<ref>. ], May 12, 2011.</ref> she studied film at the ] in Belgium.<ref name=icirc/> After making two short films she made her full-length debut with the film ''Aline'' in 1992,<ref>Charles-Henri Ramond, . ''Films du Québec'', January 2, 2009.</ref> and turned to documentary filmmaking while teaching at the ]. Her filmmaking career consisted almost entirely of documentary films afterward, except for a brief return to narrative filmmaking with the 2018 short film ''Uncertain Spring (Un printemps incertain)''.<ref name=icirc/> | Born and raised in the ] quarter of ],<ref>. ], May 12, 2011.</ref> she studied film at the ] in Belgium.<ref name=icirc/> After making two short films she made her full-length debut with the film ''Aline'' in 1992,<ref>Charles-Henri Ramond, . ''Films du Québec'', January 2, 2009.</ref> and turned to documentary filmmaking while teaching at the ]. Her filmmaking career consisted almost entirely of documentary films afterward, except for a brief return to narrative filmmaking with the 2018 short film ''Uncertain Spring (Un printemps incertain)''.<ref name=icirc/> | ||
She became best known for ''] (Vues de l'est)'' and its sequel ''] (L'Est pour toujours)'', in which she profiled the hopes and dreams of young kids growing up in the same Hochelaga-Maisonneuve neighbourhood where she had been raised.<ref>Martin Gignac, . '']'', May 12, 2011.</ref> Her other noteworthy films included ''] (La fiancée de la vie)'', a film about children coping with the deaths of parents which won the ] award at the 2002 ],<ref name=hotdocs>"Hot Docs prize goes to Montreal director". '']'', May 7, 2002.</ref> and '']'', about her own mother's battle with ].<ref>Alexandre Vigneault, . '']'', August 26, 2013.</ref> | She became best known for ''] (Vues de l'est)'' and its sequel ''] (L'Est pour toujours)'', in which she profiled the hopes and dreams of young kids growing up in the same Hochelaga-Maisonneuve neighbourhood where she had been raised.<ref>Martin Gignac, . '']'', May 12, 2011.</ref> Her other noteworthy films included ''] (La fiancée de la vie)'', a film about children coping with the deaths of parents which won the ] award at the 2002 ],<ref name=hotdocs>"Hot Docs prize goes to Montreal director". '']'', May 7, 2002.</ref> and '']'', about her own mother's battle with ] and other people coping with the unresolved absence of family connections from their lives.<ref>Alexandre Vigneault, . '']'', August 26, 2013.</ref> | ||
In 2015, five of her films were screened in a special retrospective program at Hot Docs.<ref>Jason Anderson, "Canadian filmmaker to be showcased at Hot Docs 2015: This year's festival presents a five-film retrospective of Carole Laganiere's work". '']'', April 24, 2015.</ref> | In 2015, five of her films were screened in a special retrospective program at Hot Docs.<ref>Jason Anderson, "Canadian filmmaker to be showcased at Hot Docs 2015: This year's festival presents a five-film retrospective of Carole Laganiere's work". '']'', April 24, 2015.</ref> | ||
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*''Year One (Première année)'' - 2010 | *''Year One (Première année)'' - 2010 | ||
*''] (L'Est pour toujours)'' - 2011 | *''] (L'Est pour toujours)'' - 2011 | ||
*'']'' - 2013 | *'']'' - 2013 | ||
*''Los Adioses'' - 2015 | *''Los Adioses'' - 2015 | ||
*''Uncertain Spring (Un printemps incertain)'' - 2015 | *''Uncertain Spring (Un printemps incertain)'' - 2015 | ||
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| 2013 | | 2013 | ||
| Public Award, Canadian Film | | Public Award, Canadian Film | ||
| '']'' | | '']'' | ||
| {{won}} | | {{won}} | ||
| <ref>. ], September 30, 2013.</ref> | | <ref>. ], September 30, 2013.</ref> |
Latest revision as of 13:36, 27 December 2024
Canadian film director (1959–2023)Carole Laganière | |
---|---|
Born | 1959 (1959) Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Died | (2023-02-06)February 6, 2023 |
Occupation | documentary film director |
Years active | 1980s-2020s |
Carole Laganière (1959 - February 6, 2023) was a Canadian film director from Quebec. Although she made a number of short and feature-length narrative fiction films through her career, she was known principally as a director of documentary films.
Born and raised in the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve quarter of Montreal, she studied film at the Institut national supérieur des arts du spectacle et des techniques de diffusion in Belgium. After making two short films she made her full-length debut with the film Aline in 1992, and turned to documentary filmmaking while teaching at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi. Her filmmaking career consisted almost entirely of documentary films afterward, except for a brief return to narrative filmmaking with the 2018 short film Uncertain Spring (Un printemps incertain).
She became best known for East End Kids (Vues de l'est) and its sequel East End Forever (L'Est pour toujours), in which she profiled the hopes and dreams of young kids growing up in the same Hochelaga-Maisonneuve neighbourhood where she had been raised. Her other noteworthy films included The Fiancée of Life (La fiancée de la vie), a film about children coping with the deaths of parents which won the Best Canadian Feature Documentary award at the 2002 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, and Absences, about her own mother's battle with Alzheimer's disease and other people coping with the unresolved absence of family connections from their lives.
In 2015, five of her films were screened in a special retrospective program at Hot Docs.
Her final film, Break Free (Fuir), about women escaping domestic violence, premiered at the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma in 2022.
Filmography
- Le Mouchoir de poche - 1987
- Le Jour de congé - 1989
- Aline - 1992
- Histoires de musées - 1996
- Des mots voyageurs - 1997
- The Fiancée of Life (La fiancée de la vie) - 2001
- The Moon and the Violin (Un toit, un violon, la lune) - 2003
- East End Kids (Vues de l'est) - 2004
- Country - 2006
- City Park, A Little Music for the Soul (Parc Lafontaine, petite musique urbaine) - 2006
- My Park, My Plains (Mon parc, mes plaines) - 2008
- Year One (Première année) - 2010
- East End Forever (L'Est pour toujours) - 2011
- Absences - 2013
- Los Adioses - 2015
- Uncertain Spring (Un printemps incertain) - 2015
- Quartiers sous tension - 2017
- Sylvie à l’école - 2018
- Guillaume - 2019
- Break Free (Fuir) - 2022
Awards
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Work | Result | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival | 2002 | Best Canadian Feature Documentary | The Fiancée of Life (La fiancée de la vie) | Won | |
2003 | Best Canadian Short or Mid-Length Documentary | The Moon and the Violin (Un toit, un violon, la lune) | Won | ||
Jutra Awards | 2005 | Best Documentary Film | East End Kids (Vues de l'est) | Nominated | |
Quebec City Film Festival | 2013 | Public Award, Canadian Film | Absences | Won |
References
- ^ "Carole Laganière, réalisatrice de Jour de congé, est décédée". Ici Radio-Canada, February 6, 2023.
- "« L'Est pour toujours » prend l'affiche". Ici Radio-Canada, May 12, 2011.
- Charles-Henri Ramond, "Aline – Film de Carole Laganière". Films du Québec, January 2, 2009.
- Martin Gignac, "Vues de l'Est: une adolescence plus tard". Métro, May 12, 2011.
- ^ "Hot Docs prize goes to Montreal director". The Globe and Mail, May 7, 2002.
- Alexandre Vigneault, "Absences de Carole Laganière: lettre de disparitions". La Presse, August 26, 2013.
- Jason Anderson, "Canadian filmmaker to be showcased at Hot Docs 2015: This year's festival presents a five-film retrospective of Carole Laganiere's work". Toronto Star, April 24, 2015.
- Victoria Ahearn, "In brief: Inès among world premieres set for Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma". Playback, April 1, 2022.
- Lindsay Gibb, "Hot docs (4/25-5/4/03)". Take One, Fall 2003.
- "Cinémascope leads Jutras with nine". Playback, January 31, 2005.
- "FCVQ : un film belge remporte les honneurs". Ici Radio-Canada, September 30, 2013.