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Suzie LeBlanc Movies

2012  
 
Quebecois director François Delisle helms this way-offbeat, avant-garde opus that not only tells several unique stories but actually invents a new form of cinematic language. Delisle intercuts five mini-narratives, each spoken entirely in first-person voiceover by a different character. One is a fortysomething man (Delisle) who committed a hit-and-run, tried to dispose of the body, and was sent to prison; another is a down-on-his luck drug dealer with extreme facial injuries wrought by his "trade"; a third is an elderly woman heartsick over her son's incarceration and her sister's terminal illness; a fourth is a young woman still contending with a separation from her lover and attempting to start fresh; and the fifth is a prison guard juggling an emotionally trying job with family issues. As the movie rolls forward, it becomes apparent that all of these individuals' lives are connected via that of the hit-and-run perpetrator. Though the movie does contain some live-action footage, Delislemostly enlists a preponderance of single images (shown with the narration atop them) that have metaphoric connotations tied to the movie's stories - such as waterfalls, rivers, time-lapse shots of cloud banks, roses, and very occasionally, fauna. The history of this motion picture is as unusual and unexpected as its content: it actually began as a book of photographs and evolved into a feature script as Delisle spontaneously wrote the monologues, drawing some inspiration from emotional experiences and journeys in his own life. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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2008  
 
A couple struggles with post-partum depression in this disconcerting drama that breaks the silence on an issue that has plagued Western culture for quite some time despite being rarely discussed in the mainstream media. Pierre (Patrick Goyette) and Elisabeth (Suzie LeBlanc) have just given birth to their birth child. While for most couples this would be a cause for celebration, Pierre and Elisabeth are an exception to the rule: the delivery of their child was especially difficult, and now in order for Elisabeth to fully recover, the new parents will be spending some time in the country with Pierre's mother Louise (Ginette Morin). They stil have not named the baby, which is restless and irritable, and refuses to breastfeed. The stress has taken a visible toll on the parents, and when Pierre returns to work Elisabeth is left to deal with the stress of motherhood alone. As Elisabeth takes to leaving the child with Louise so she can walk next door and spend time with her young neighbor Naomi (Marilou Longpré Pilon), the absent Pierre inadvertently worsens the situations by missing the warning signs that something is seriously amiss. Later, when it comes time to baptize the baby, the despairing Elisabeth feels herself pushed to the breaking point. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Patrick GoyetteSuzie LeBlanc, (more)