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Octobre

 
Movies:

Octobre

  • Directors: Pierre Falardeau; Rene Pothier
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Docudrama
  • Main Cast: Hugo Dube, Luc Picard, Pierre Rivard, Denis Trudel, Serge Houde
  • Release Year: 1994
  • Country: CA
  • Run Time: 105 minutes

Plot

This Canadian psychological thriller, based upon a true story wherein a Quebec cabinet minister was kidnapped in October 1970 by French-Canadian terrorists, has a pro French-Canadian sentiment that is guaranteed to spark controversy among northern viewers. The film is especially as the tensions between French-Canadians and the Canadian government remain high. The story is presented from the viewpoint of four members of the Front de Liberation du Quebec. In the first scene, members of the FLQ are rapidly escaping after dumping the corpse of Pierre Laporte, Labor Minister, into their car trunk. Using flashback, the film chronicles the week prior to the murder including the actual kidnapping. Much of the action occurs in the bungalow to which to terrorists took LaPorte. There they must wrestle with the potential consequences of their actions. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Hugo Dube
  • Luc Picard
  • Pierre Rivard
  • Denis Trudel
  • Serge Houde - Pierre Laporte

Credit

Yves Rivard - Associate Producer, Michele Hamel - Costume Designer, Pierre Falardeau - Director, Rene Pothier - Director, Michel Arcand - Editor, Richard Gregoire - Composer (Music Score), Michel Arcand - Musical Direction/Supervision, Alain Dostie - Cinematographer, Marc Daigle - Producer, Bernadette Payeur - Producer, Andre Dupuy - Producer, Pierre Falardeau - Screenwriter, Francis Simard - Short Story Author
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Artist: Octobre
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Group Members:

Gerry Leduc, Richard Pelletier, Mario Legare, Jean Dorais, Pierre Flynn

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

  • Genres: Avant-Garde
  • Representative Albums: "1972-1989," "Les Nouvelles Terres," "Chants dans la Nuit"

Biography

With a first album released in 1973, Octobre (the name comes from the episode of terrorism Quebec lived through in October 1970) preceded by a few months the arrival of Beau Dommage and Harmonium on the Quebec music scene, becoming one of the first francophone groups of the province (with Offenbach) to leave its mark. More intellectual than any of these bands, they didn't reach the same popular success, but still remain an essential part of Quebec '70s rock.

In 1969, singer/keyboardist Pierre Flynn, his cousin guitarist Jean Dorais, and his friend bassist Mario Légaré were teenagers playing songs by the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, and Bob Dylan in an undocumented band called Gladstone, which lasted over a year. Légaré, Flynn, and local drummer Pierre Hébert formed Maelstrom (also undocumented) in 1971, a group focusing on francophone rock. In 1972, Dorais quit the group Jude 3 (a prototype of the prog rock outfit Pollen) to join them, and Octobre quickly records a demo tape, followed by a first LP, eponymous, released in June of the next year. The leader was 18 years old.

Flynn's seductive voice, intense lyrics, and dashing-young-man-with-a-somber-air looks won them immediate media coverage. Their music was influenced by British progressive rock (they opened twice for King Crimson in 1973), but also by the French singer/songwriters, especially Jacques Brel. Unlike Harmonium and Beau Dommage, the most popular Quebec groups of the '70s, Octobre never used acoustic guitars; their sound was electric, rooted in city life. The song "La Maudite Machine" ("The Damn Machine") was quickly hailed as a rebellious anthem by a generation of Montrealers. From 1973 to 1976, the group played an increasing number of shows and released two other studio albums, Les Nouvelles Terres (1974) and Survivance (1975), each one expressing more complex and mature musical ideas.

The group took a hiatus in 1976-1977 to work on their fourth LP L'Autoroute des Rêves, their most ambitious record. It includes orchestral arrangements and the jazziest music Flynn ever wrote. The album was released by the major CBS (now Sony). In 1978, Octobre came back to the stage with a grandiose concert at the Théâtre Saint-Denis in Montreal with four horns and three background vocalists. Considered their finest hour, the show was released that same year as the two-LP set Chants Dans la Nuit. Another double album, a collection of songs from their first three LPs, was released by the group's former label.

Hébert quit to become a session musician, causing the first change of lineup since the group's inception. Drummer Richard Pelletier was recruited for a few concerts in 1979, along with saxophonist Gerry Leduc. By 1980, all major record labels were bailing out of the francophone Quebec market -- the failure of the first referendum for independence sends Quebec singer/songwriters to the gutter. Nonetheless, the group worked on their fifth and final LP, Clandestins (1980, Kébec Disc), which was a return to rock basics. Hébert came back for the recording and a few concerts. But the new sound left audiences rather cold and the musicians didn't have as much fun as they used to ten years before. The group played their last show in August 1982. By that time, Pierre Flynn had started working in Plume Latraverse's band. His first solo album, Parfums du Hasard, came out in 1987. Dorais also recorded a solo LP (Radio-actif, 1985) before finding a job as a computer technician. Légaré and Hébert can be heard on dozens of records by the best Quebec artists of the '80s and '90s.

André Ménard, director of the Montreal Jazz Festival, invited Octobre to reunite for one night in 1989. The show was recorded and four tracks were included on the 1995 two-CD collection 1972-1989. The release of this set gave the group the occasion to tour Quebec one last time. ~ François Couture, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Octobre
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This article is about the movie Octobre; for information about the Gregorian month, see October.
Octobre
Directed by Pierre Falardeau
Produced by Marc Daigle
Written by Francis Simard (book)
Pierre Falardeau
Starring Hugo Dubé
Luc Picard
Music by Richard Grégoire
Cinematography Alain Dostie
Editing by Michel Arcand
Release date(s) 30 September 1994
Running time 97 min
Country Flag of Canada Canada
Language French

Octobre is a 1994 Quebec movie directed by filmmaker and noted separatist Pierre Falardeau. It tells a fictionalized version of the October Crisis from the point of view of the Chénier Cell, the FLQ terrorist cell who in 1970 kidnapped and murdered Quebec minister and Deputy Premier Pierre Laporte. The movie was co-written with and based on a book by Francis Simard, who was one of the members of the Chénier Cell, and co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada.

See also

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