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Days of Darkness

L'âge des ténèbres

Canada

2007

104 Min
Color
2.35:1
English, French
  • Currently 3.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Denys Arcand

PROD Daniel Louis, Denise Robert

SCR Denys Arcand

DP Guy Dufaux

CAST Marc Labrèche, Diane Kruger, Sylvie Léonard, Caroline Néron, Rufus Wainwright, Macha Grenon, Emma de Caunes, Didier Lucien, Rosalie Julien, Pierre Curzi, Christian Bégin, Donald Sutherland

ED Isabelle Dedieu

PROD DES François Séguin

MUSIC Philippe Miller

Cannes (Out of Competition)

Synopsis

Jean-Marc Leblanc (Marc Labreche) is living the ideal North American life. He has a big house, a safe civil service job, a wife who is a go-getter businesswoman, and two kids. But the wife and kids ignore him, and as for the job, it is a help agency… he meets with people with horrifying (and also very funny, for most of the film is a black comedy) problems and explains why the government can do nothing to help them. Ah, but it’s such a sensitive agency! No smoking is allowed within a mile of the government office, the word “black” cannot be applied to people (you must call them “of equatorial origin”), and when a desperate woman arrives seeking help for her sick father, she is told the offices are closed for sensitivity training. You want the people who “help” you to be sensitive, don’t you, the guard asks her. It’s a lot like the film “Brazil” Punctuating this are delicious fantasy scenes in which gorgeous women swoon at the sight of our hero. But even those fantasy creatures develop minds of their own. Almost by chance, Leblanc meets a woman at a speed-dating event who leads him to a world of medieval pagentry, which Leblanc comes to realize is as phony as the commercial world he detests. The plot doesn’t end here. There’s struggle, resolution and redemption too. —http://filmfilestoo.blogspot.com/2008/04/lge-des-tnbres.html

Director

Original

Denys Arcand

Arcand was born in Deschambault, Quebec. He grew up in a devoutly Roman Catholic home in a village about 40 km southwest of Quebec City. He attended Jesuit school for nine years. Entering his teen years, the family moved to Montreal and although he dreamed about being a professional tennis player, while studying for a Masters Degree in history at the Université de Montréal he became involved in film making that gave him a new sense of direction. During his university days, he and several friends would drive 600 km to New York City every few months to take in European films playing there that were not available in Quebec.

In 1963, he joined the National Film Board of Canada where he produced several award-winning documentaries in his native French language. A social activist, he made a feature-length documentary in 1970 titled On est au coton (We work in Cotton) that showed the exploitation of textile workers. The film caused an uproar that resulted in it not being distributed… read more

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Andréia Amaro

8Jun11

I loved the first two movies and I'm sure this won't disappoint me.

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