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) is a 2009 Quebec long-feature film, about the Montreal Canadiens centennial celebrations written by Jacques Savoie and directed by Sylvain Archambault. The film was launched in theaters on 4 December 2009, the anniversary day of establishment of the Montreal Canadiens enterprise. [1] [2]
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 1913: Battle of the Long Sault: Frank Crane: Frank Crane: Short drama: Made with the Kanehnawaga First Nations [1]: 1914: Evangeline
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
Laurentia (film) The Left-Hand Side of the Fridge; Legend No. 17; Léolo; Lies My Father Told Me; Life of Pi (film) Like the Ones I Used to Know; Lipsett Diaries; Liverpool (2012 film) Looking for Leonard; Love and Magnets; Love in the Time of Civil War; Love Me (1991 film) Love Project; The Luck of Ginger Coffey (film) Lucky Number Slevin
The "Seasons" column lists the first year of the season of the player's first game and the last year of the season of the player's last game. For example, a player who played one game in the 2000–01 season would be listed as playing with the team from 2000–2001, regardless of what calendar year the game occurred within.
Film investment in British Columbia rose from $188.5 million in 1990 to over $1 billion in 1999. [162] Feature film production rose from 16 films to 56 films, with the total number of productions rising from 50 to 192. [163] From 2011 to 2021, film and television production British Columbia replaced Ontario as having the highest amount of spending.
The National Film Board of Canada was established by the Parliament of Canada in 1939. [8] Its office moved from Ottawa to Montreal in 1956. [8] In 1957, the new commissioner, Albert Trueman, recommended the creation of a separately funded French production wing.
Montreal Blues is a Canadian improvisational drama film, directed by Pascal Gélinas and released in 1972. [1] Created in collaboration with the Grand Cirque ordinaire, a Montreal theatre troupe active in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the film centres on a group of young people living in a housing commune, who decide to open a health food restaurant together.