Nelligan_(film)

<i>Nelligan</i> (film)

Nelligan (film)

1991 Canadian film


Nelligan is a Canadian drama film, directed by Robert Favreau and released in 1991.[1] A biopic of Quebec poet Émile Nelligan, the film stars Marc Saint-Pierre as the adolescent Nelligan and Michel Comeau as the adult Nelligan after his confinement to an insane asylum.[2]

Quick Facts Nelligan, Directed by ...

The film also stars Luc Morissette and Lorraine Pintal as Nelligan's parents, Gabriel Arcand as his mentor Eugène Seers, David La Haye as his friend and colleague Arthur de Bussières, Dominique Leduc as his friend Idola Saint-Jean, Christian Bégin as poet Jean Charbonneau, and Gilles Pelletier as poet Louis-Honoré Fréchette. A key theme of the film is that Nelligan was a poète maudit continually pulled in different directions by opposing forces, including the conflicting cultural identities of his Irish-Canadian father and his French-Canadian mother, the competing influences of Seers and Fréchette on his writing, and a nearly asexual ambivalence in his personal relationships with both Bussières and Saint-Jean.[3] The film also posits that Nelligan was subject to incestuous advances by his mother.[4]

The film received two Genie Award nominations at the 12th Genie Awards in 1991, for Best Cinematography (Guy Dufaux) and Best Costume Design (François Laplante).[5]


References

  1. "Nelligan – Film de Robert Favreau". Films du Québec, February 4, 2009.
  2. "Newcomer St. Pierre looks part, but is less than convincing as Nelligan". Montreal Gazette, September 27, 1991.
  3. Mario Cloutier, "Coup de coeur : N’est-il poète que maudit?" Ciné-Bulles, Vol. 11 No. 3 (1992), pp. 38–39.
  4. "A revisionist adjusts the halo: Emile Nelligan; Rather than placing Quebec's beloved tragic poet on a pedestal, director Robert Favreau portrays his subject as a rather gloomy adolescent". The Globe and Mail, October 26, 1991.
  5. "Genie candidates announced". Edmonton Journal, October 10, 1991.



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