Forgotten Flowers Explained

Forgotten Flowers
Native Name:
Director:André Forcier
Producer:Louis Laverdière
Linda Pinet
Jean-François Roesler
Starring:Roy Dupuis
Yves Jacques
Juliette Gosselin
Christine Beaulieu
Mylène Mackay
Music:André Forcier (as Robert Fusil)
Jo Millette
Cinematography:Nathalie Moliavko-Visotzky
Editing:Elisabeth Olga Tremblay
Studio:Exogene Films
Les Films du Paria
Distributor:Filmoption
Runtime:102 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:French

Forgotten Flowers (French: Les fleurs oubliées) is a Canadian comedy film, directed by André Forcier and released in 2019.[1] The film stars Roy Dupuis as Albert Payette, an agronomist who has lived in seclusion making mead since becoming disillusioned with his former career, but whose life is turned upside down when the late Brother Marie-Victorin Kirouac (Yves Jacques) returns to earth to enlist his help in an environmental campaign to take down his former employer Transgenia over its line of toxic pesticides.[2]

The film also stars Juliette Gosselin as Lili de Rosbil and Christine Beaulieu as Mathilde Gauvreau, a journalist and lawyer who also become involved in the campaign, and Mylène Mackay as Mathilde's ancestor Marcelle Gauvreau, a fellow botanist with whom Marie-Victorin had an emotional, but not physical, romantic relationship with prior to his death.[3] Other cast members include Émile Schneider, Donald Pilon, Dorothée Berryman, Louis Champagne and France Castel.

The film had its theatrical premiere on September 16, 2019 at the Cinéfest Sudbury International Film Festival,[4] before premiering commercially on October 25.[5]

Mackay again played Marcelle in Lyne Charlebois's 2023 film Tell Me Why These Things Are So Beautiful (Dis-moi pourquoi ces choses sont si belles), a more conventional historical drama centred specifically on her relationship with Kirouac.[6]

Notes and References

  1. , "Les fleurs oubliées, d’André Forcier : fantaisie verte". La Presse, October 19, 2019.
  2. Alex Rose, "Roy Dupuis pukes actual rainbows in André Forcier’s Les fleurs oubliées". Cult MTL, October 25, 2019.
  3. Marie-Lise Rousseau, "«Les fleurs oubliées»: bouquet écologique et psychédélique". Métro, October 25, 2019.
  4. Claudia Hébert, "Quoi voir pour ne rien manquer du 31e Cinéfest". Ici Radio-Canada, September 15, 2019.
  5. André Lavoie, "«Les fleurs oubliées»: une flore réinventée". Le Devoir, October 25, 2019.
  6. Maxime Demers, "Le film «Dis-moi pourquoi ces choses sont si belles» sera présenté en clôture du Festival du cinéma international en Abitibi-Témiscamingue". Le Journal de Montréal, September 7, 2023.