Casts & Crew
Pascale Bussières
Gabriel Maillé
Luc Picard
François Papineau
Angèle Coutu
Denise Dubois
Sébastien Valade
Martin McDuff
Julien Lemire
Étienne Laforge
Guillaume Cyr
Michel Perron
Nathalie Cavezzali
Emmanuel Bégin
Stéphanie Labbé
Éric Brochu
Valérie Blain
Amélie Prévost
Pierre Mailloux
Mike Chute
Mélanie Dolbec
Also Directed by Guy Édoin
Following her death, an old woman returns to haunt her husband and encourages him to pass away.
Celebrated European actor Sophie Bernard is in Montreal shooting a movie, and she's taking the opportunity to visit her gay son Thomas in the hope of bridging the rift that's grown between them. But Thomas has his own agenda for their time together; he intends to finally get some answers as to the identity of his father. Meanwhile, at Ville-Marie Hospital, paramedic Pierre struggles with PTSD, and though he has support in Marie, a nurse who keeps the overflowing emergency room running, it's uncertain whether he'll remain able to cope with the high intensity of his work. Each of these four characters is dealing with emotional damage — and on one dark Montreal night, their lives will all intersect in a fateful occurrence at Ville-Marie.
A couple is trying to drown their daughter under a covered bridge. At the same time, a young farmgirl is trying to drag her cow across the bridge. But whoever you are, if you cross that bridge your life changes forever...
During a beating in the forest, a troubled young girl announces to her mother that she intends to leave the family home.
Diane Messier lives on a farm in the Eastern Townships, near the American border, with her daughter Sarah and her two sisters, Carmen and Julie. Following a tragic accident, Diane feels constantly threatened and even believes her house is haunted. Worried by her daughter's actions, Angèle returns from Florida to bring comfort to Diane and try to reunite the family clan.
A Lebanese immigrant living in Montreal is haunted by his sister's death.
A feature-length documentary portrait of Québécoise painter Johanne Corno, who has lived and worked in New York City for more than 20 years. Ignored by the art intelligentsia in Québec, she settled abroad to escape that creative constraint, and built an enviable international career. Today, she casts a lucid eye on her work and describes the resources she draws on to survive in the jungle of the contemporary art world.