Laughter | |
Native Name: | |
Director: | Martin Laroche |
Producer: | Fanny-Laure Malo |
Starring: | Léane Labrèche-Dor Alexandre Landry Micheline Lanctôt |
Cinematography: | Mathieu Laverdière |
Editing: | Amélie Labrèche |
Music: | Robert Marcel Lepage |
Studio: | La Boîte à Fanny |
Distributor: | Maison 4:3 |
Runtime: | 124 minutes |
Country: | Canada |
Language: | French |
Laughter (French: Le Rire) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Martin Laroche and released in 2020.[1] The film stars Léane Labrèche-Dor as Valérie, a woman who was the sole survivor of a massacre in her hometown several years earlier in the midst of a civil war; although she has successfully rebuilt her life with a job in a long-term care home and a new romantic relationship with Gabriel (Alexandre Landry), she still struggles with survivor's guilt until the arrival of Jeanne (Micheline Lanctôt), a new patient at the home, gives her a new perspective on life.[2]
The film's cast also includes Sylvie Drapeau, Christine Beaulieu, Catherine Proulx-Lemay, Jean-Sébastien Courchesne, Évelyne Rompré and Évelyne de la Chenelière.
The film premiered in theatres on January 31, 2020.[3] On April 7, with virtually all film distribution in Canada suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, the film was made available for free internet streaming as a special one-day promotion by its distributor, Maison 4:3.[4]
For Le Devoir, Jérôme Delgado praised Labrèche-Dor's performance, but wrote that the film overall was riddled with plot holes, most notably the fact that the film's physical and social setting showed virtually no traces of actually having been torn apart by war.[5] André Duchesne offered a similar assessment for La Presse, criticizing the lack of any significant information in the film about an event that would have been far more traumatic to society than was evident in the screenplay.[2] He also noted that a key scene in the film, a soliloquy by the long-term care centre's human resources director, was so similar to a scene in Denys Arcand's 2003 film The Barbarian Invasions (Les Invasions barbares) that he hoped, but did not know for sure, that the scene was intended as a deliberate homage.[2]
The film received two Prix Iris nominations at the 22nd Quebec Cinema Awards:[6]
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) and nominee(s) | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prix Iris | 2020 | Best Actress | Léane Labrèche-Dor | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Micheline Lanctôt |