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Phantom Life (French: La Vie fantôme) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Jacques Leduc and released in 1992. [1] An adaptation of the novel by Danièle Sallenave, the film stars Ron Lea as Pierre, an academic at the Université de Sherbrooke who is torn between his marriage to Annie (Johanne-Marie Tremblay) and his extramarital affair with the younger Laure (Pascale Bussières).
Jean-Guy Bouchard is a Canadian actor from Quebec.He is most noted for his role as Tonio in the film Requiem for a Handsome Bastard (Requiem pour un beau sans-coeur), [1] for which he received a Genie Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor at the 13th Genie Awards in 1992.
Ferland was a chemist in Quebec City who manufactured PCP for the Rock Machine. [9] Quesnel killed Ferland in his Quebec City house on 30 January 1995. [ 9 ] On 27 February 1995, Quesnel killed Claude "The Peak" Rivard, a Montreal drug dealer who worked for the Pelletier clan who were allied with the Rock Machine. [ 9 ]
This is a list of films produced and co-produced in Quebec, Canada ordered by year of release. Although the majority of Quebec films are produced in French due to Quebec's predominantly francophone population, a number of English language films are also produced in the province.
Les nuits de la Main : Cent ans de spectacles sur le boulevard St-Laurent (1891–1991) [Nights on the Main: One hundred years of shows on boulevard St-Laurent (1891–1991)] (in French). Weintraub, W. (1998). McClelland & Stewart Inc. (ed.). City Unique : Montreal Days and Nights in the 1940s and 1950s. Toronto.
The Monument-National (French pronunciation: [mɔnymɑ̃ nasjɔnal]) is an historic Canadian theatre located at 1182 Saint Laurent Boulevard in Montreal, Quebec. With a capacity of over 1,600 seats, the venue was erected between 1891 and 1894 (130 years ago) () and was originally the cultural centre of the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society.
In the background, Mayor of Montreal Jean Drapeau. " Vive le Québec libre ! " (French: [viv lə ke.bɛk libʁ], 'Long live free Quebec!') was a phrase in a speech delivered by French President Charles de Gaulle in Montreal, Quebec on July 24, 1967, during an official visit to Canada for the Expo 67 world's fair.
The Gargantua bar attack was a shooting and arson-attack that occurred at the Gargantua, a nightclub bar located on 1369 rue Beaubien Est in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on January 21, 1975, killing 13 individuals, including the manager. The Gargantua, which had been known for being a meeting place for underworld figures, was previously the scene ...