Posted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:40 pm
A chillingly timely film. A kidnapping incident by Quebecois Nationalists in 1970 caused our northern neighbor to abandon any pretense of legal due process. It passed a law abrogating virtually every legal protection for anyone deemed to be a possible "terrorist sympathizer". Hundreds were jailed without charge -- and left imprisoned incommunicado for weeks. This film, though fictionalized, was based on interviews with 50 of the victims of this spree of governmental lawlessness.
The performances here are so life-like that one finds it hard to believe this is not an actual documentary. Of special note, the performances of the most central characters (by Jean Lapointe and Helene Loiselle) as parents of three young girls -- both of whom are arrested -- he because he is a union steward, she -- seemingly out of spite.
The parallels to a certain other nation's legal transgressions, imilarly prompted by a "war against terror", are chilling. If it could happen to our civilized neighbor, it most certainly can happen here too. Maybe it is unsurprising that this Canadian masterpiece is unknown to its southern neighbors.
This is the concluding work in a tremendous (and reasonably priced) fully-bilingual box set "Michel Brault. Oeuvres 1958-1974" -- released by the National Film board of Canada. This also comes with an excellent (large) booklet.
http://www.nfb.ca/trouverunfilm/fichefi ... lg=en&exp=
($39.99 at www.archambault.ca)
The performances here are so life-like that one finds it hard to believe this is not an actual documentary. Of special note, the performances of the most central characters (by Jean Lapointe and Helene Loiselle) as parents of three young girls -- both of whom are arrested -- he because he is a union steward, she -- seemingly out of spite.
The parallels to a certain other nation's legal transgressions, imilarly prompted by a "war against terror", are chilling. If it could happen to our civilized neighbor, it most certainly can happen here too. Maybe it is unsurprising that this Canadian masterpiece is unknown to its southern neighbors.
This is the concluding work in a tremendous (and reasonably priced) fully-bilingual box set "Michel Brault. Oeuvres 1958-1974" -- released by the National Film board of Canada. This also comes with an excellent (large) booklet.
http://www.nfb.ca/trouverunfilm/fichefi ... lg=en&exp=
($39.99 at www.archambault.ca)