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Montreal Main is a Canadian docufiction film, released in 1974. [1] The film was directed by Frank Vitale [], and written by Vitale, Allan Moyle and Stephen Lack.. The film centres on Frank (Vitale) and Bozo (Moyle), two friends of ambiguous sexuality living in the bohemian arts community of Montreal, Quebec. [2]
Wait Until Dark (1967), starring Audrey Hepburn, Alan Arkin, Richard Crenna (set primarily in New York but some of it was filmed in Montreal, which also features as a setting in the beginning) La course du lièvre à travers les champs [And Hope to Die] (1972), Jean-Louis Trintignant, Aldo Ray, Robert Ryan
It is the first film made in Quebec to be produced as a Netflix original film. [2] The film stars Guillaume Laurin as Antoine, a man from Montreal who becomes worried about a natural disaster and joins a survivalist training program in rural Nord-du-Québec led by an experienced middle-aged survivalist, Alain (Réal Bossé). [1]
Mesrine (2008 film) The Military Man; Missing Victor Pellerin; Mr. Nobody (film) Mommy (2014 film) Monsieur Lazhar; Montreal Blues; A Montreal Girl; Montreal Girls; Montreal Main; Montreal Stories; Montreal, White City; Mortimer Griffin and Shalinsky; Mr. Aiello; My Daughter, My Angel; My First Wedding (2006 film) My Friend Dino; The Mysterious ...
Sexe de rue (French pronunciation: [sɛksə də ʁy]; English: Street Sex) [4] is a 2003 Canadian documentary film about the history and current conditions of street prostitutes in the Centre-Sud of Montreal, written, directed and co-produced by Richard Boutet [], [1] who died of a heart attack on 29 August 2003, a few days before the film's premiere at the Montreal World Film Festival.
Montreal’s Fantasia International Film Festival has unveiled its second wave of titles, which includes the world premiere of Ant Timpson’s “Bookworm” as the opening night film. This year ...
Montreal North (French: Montréal-Nord, pronounced [mɔ̃ʁeal nɔʁ]) is a borough within the city of Montreal, Canada. It consists entirely of the former city of Montreal North on the Island of Montreal in southwestern Quebec. It was amalgamated into the City of Montreal on January 1, 2002.
The CINEMANIA French Film Festival in Montreal was established in 1995 and has continued annually ever since. The festival is dedicated solely to quality French-language feature films emanating from France, Belgium, Switzerland, Quebec, Algeria, Morocco, Senegal, and other French-speaking regions.