SPLA : Portal to cultural diversity
Cultures-Haïti

Isabelle Lavigne

Isabelle Lavigne
© RIDM 2010, Montréal
Film director, Sound engineer, Screenwriter
Principal country concerned : Column : Cinema/tv

How does our environment make us what we are? Who shapes the dreams that we think are ours? How much space is left for being yourself?

Those questions underlie JUICE, Le 4125, rue Parthenais and Junior. Films about men's worlds where only winners matter and losers are invisible, taking solace in their sincerity.

After turning 30 and becoming a mother, Isabelle Lavigne turned her attention to a women's world, making La nuit, elles dansent (At Night, They Dance). She remains as interested as ever in the intersections between social order and difference, observing a family of belly dancers who - by simply making a living - transgress against moral order.

Thanks to the time she invests and the trust she builds with her subjects, Isabelle Lavigne's films take us inside dramatically rich microcosms, which she patiently explores in great depth. The result is real-life narratives that resemble fiction.

Filmography

Back to the new world (2008)

JUNIOR
Best Canadian Documentary, Hot Doc's, 2008
Best documentary, Gala des prix Gémeaux, Montreal 2009

Le 4125, rue Parthenais
Colin Low Award for Best Canadian Documentary, Doxa, 2002

J.U.I.C.E.
Best student film
Norman McLaren award for best documentary
Kodak award
Montreal Film Festival, 1999

Files

1 files

Watch video

Nuit, elles dansent (La)

(Video)

Partners

  • Gens de la Caraïbe
  • Collectif 2004 Images
  • Caracoli

With the support of