Polygraph (film) explained

Polygraph
Native Name:
Director:Robert Lepage
Producer:Philippe Carcassonne
Ulrich Felsberg
Madeleine Henrié
Bruno Jobin
Jean-Pierre St-Michel
Starring:Marie Brassard
Patrick Goyette
Peter Stormare
Maria de Medeiros
Music:Robert Caux
Pierre Marchand
Cinematography:Guy Dufaux
Editing:Jean-François Bergeron
Emmanuelle Castro
Studio:In Extremis Images
Cinéa
Distributor:Ciné 360
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:French

Polygraph (fr|Le Polygraphe) is a film by Canadian director Robert Lepage, released in 1996.[1]

The film stars Marie Brassard as Lucie Champagne, an actress who is given the role of Marie-Claire in a film dramatizing a real-life murder, and Patrick Goyette as François, Lucie's former boyfriend who was Marie-Claire's neighbour, remains a suspect in the real crime to the point that even he is no longer fully convinced that he is innocent, and is being pressured to play the killer in the film.[2] The film's cast also includes Josée Deschênes, Maria de Medeiros, Peter Stormare, Marie-Christine Lê-Huu and Richard Fréchette.

The film was inspired in part by the 1979 murder of France Lachapelle, an actress in Quebec City who had been a friend and colleague of Lepage's, with the result that Lepage discovered her body and was actually the police investigator's initial suspect before being cleared,[3] and filmmaker Yves Simoneau's subsequent request that Lepage play the killer in Red Eyes (Les Yeux rouges), his 1982 film dramatizing the incident.[4]

Awards

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)Result
Genie Awards17th Genie AwardsBest Motion PicturePhilippe Carcassonne, Bruno Jobin, Jean-Pierre St-Michel, Ulrich Felsberg[5]
Best DirectorRobert Lepage
Best ActressMarie Brassard
Best Supporting ActressJosée Deschênes
Maria de Medeiros
Best Adapted ScreenplayRobert Lepage, Marie Brassard
Best CinematographyGuy Dufaux
Overall SoundJo Caron, Claude Hazanavicius, Hans Peter Strobl, John Nestorowich
Sound EditingJean-Pierre Pinard, Jérôme Décarie, Serge Fortin, Raymond Vermette, Mario Rodrigue, Jacques Plante

Notes and References

  1. [Gerald Pratley]
  2. John Griffin, "Polygraphe: where truth and lies meet". Montreal Gazette, November 16, 1996.
  3. David Lawrence Pike, Canadian Cinema Since the 1980s: At the Heart of the World. University of Toronto Press, 2012. . p, 166.
  4. Gary Michael Dault, "Robert Lepage's Le Confessionnal & Le Polygraphe". Take One, Spring 1997.
  5. Christopher Harris, "Greyson's Lilies leads Genie field Film with all-male cast gets 14 nominations". The Globe and Mail, October 17, 1996.