Sunday, November 27, 2016

Jean-Marc Vallée in the News

Taking a break from the post-production of Big Little Lies (that needs to be completed by December 23rd), Jean-Marc Vallée held an intimate master class with a group of eight at-risk teens from the Emmett Johns school as part of Dans la rue and Québec Cinéma. Two new articles from La Presse and Le Huffington Post Quebec recount what went on. After a screening of Dallas Buyers Club, the students and some journalist, were there to ask him some questions and get him talking. He liked the experience so much that he hopes to return for another event.

From the event: Vallée said that Demolition is the favorite of his films even though it was a commercial disappointment. While being bored at cégep he took at course called ‘Cinema and Society’ whose prof Yves Lever gave him the desire to dream and become a filmmaker. Big Little Lies is described as a police procedural and drama of manners while Vallée also sees some connections between it and his breakthrough film C.R.A.Z.Y., which shows that he’s conscious about how his American projects rework and refine his earlier Québécois films. But the real scoop of the pieces is when he discusses his upcoming projects: Sharp Objects with Amy Adams as a TV series will be his next project, though unfortunately the more personal Janis Joplin film has been scrapped (most likely due to copyright issues). But whats really exciting to hear is that he’s planning to return to filmmaking immediately after with two Québécois projects. But during his American hiatus there was a new generation of Québécois filmmakers that imposed themselves: Stéphane Lafleur, Anne Émond, Philippe Lesage and Sophie Goyette. The competition has grown. But it’s still a positive gesture that he's taking more control of his oeuvre by returning to Montreal to create more personal stories and to engage more with his community.

So what exactly are these new films? Could they include the adaptation of Dominique Fortier’s Du bon usage des étoiles? I’m skeptical of this since its grand historical narrative of John Franklin’s trans-Atlantic journey would suggest the necessity of an English-language transnational co-production. And what ever happened to his planned French production? More information will hopefully come.

A director of red herrings, false starts and who makes sure to keep you guessing: Jean-Marc Vallée, or how to start again anew, be loyal to oneself and engage with society and the world.

1 comment:

  1. My guess? A story of an wandering and angry teen who finds some solace through imagination. Perhaps inspired by his own childhood, his sons and seeing these teenagers? It could be a spiritual sequel to his early magique films and parallels the story of C.R.A.Z.Y. I'm imagining something in the line of Roald Dahl and Spielberg.

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