Brussels-based company Best Friend Forever has boarded international rights to “Death Does Not Exist” (“La mort n’existe pas”) which is being showcased in the work-in-progress section at the Annecy Film Festival.
Currently in production, “Death Does Not Exist” is directed by Félix Dufour-Laperrière who previously helmed “Archipel” which won the Annecy Contrechamps Jury Award in 2021, and ‘Ville Neuve’ which had its premiere at Venice Days 2018.
“Death Does Not Exist” takes place after young activists fail an armed attack to overthrow figures of the establishment in their sumptuous villa. Helen freezes and abandons her accomplices. Manon, another
member of her group, returns to haunt her. The film’s voice cast includes Zeneb Blanchet, Karelle Tremblay (“The Nature of Love”), Mattis Savard-Verhoeven, Barbara Ulrich and Irène Dufour.
“’Death Does Not Exist’ deals with difficult subjects – violence, commitment, profound convictions – in a way that exposes their underlying tensions, outbursts, dead ends,” said Félix Dufour-Laperrière,...
Currently in production, “Death Does Not Exist” is directed by Félix Dufour-Laperrière who previously helmed “Archipel” which won the Annecy Contrechamps Jury Award in 2021, and ‘Ville Neuve’ which had its premiere at Venice Days 2018.
“Death Does Not Exist” takes place after young activists fail an armed attack to overthrow figures of the establishment in their sumptuous villa. Helen freezes and abandons her accomplices. Manon, another
member of her group, returns to haunt her. The film’s voice cast includes Zeneb Blanchet, Karelle Tremblay (“The Nature of Love”), Mattis Savard-Verhoeven, Barbara Ulrich and Irène Dufour.
“’Death Does Not Exist’ deals with difficult subjects – violence, commitment, profound convictions – in a way that exposes their underlying tensions, outbursts, dead ends,” said Félix Dufour-Laperrière,...
- 6/10/2024
- by Elsa Keslassy
- Variety Film + TV
The Animated World is a regular feature spotlighting animation from around the globe.Félix Dufour-Laperrière’s Archipel (Archipelago) is a complex and radiant meditation on the intimate and social territories we all inhabit. Premiering at the 50th International Film Festival Rotterdam, it is a rich film that rewards multiple viewings. A poetic essay loosely structured around the metaphor of the archipelago, it combines documentation with imagination as it sifts through Québécois history and images, pondering the ways in which real events are shaped by individual perspectives, desires, and expectations. Focusing in large part on the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, the film mulls over the secularization, modernization and separatist activism of the period through the use of dialogue, archival footage, and a dynamic range of animated styles that both visualize and deconstruct these ideas. The film progresses as a meandering journey through the Hochelaga Archipelago in the St.
- 3/9/2021
- MUBI
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