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Bulldozer (French)
Location
Main screening room
Date
December 11th, 2023
Duration
93 min
Cycle
Coq-à-l'âne !

This end-of-year cycle is an opportunity to bring together some of the finest 35mm prints in our collections.
The criteria that led to this selection:
a) the rarity of the chosen movie on film
b) the effect of contrast (period, style, culture) between one film and the other
c) the quality of conservation of the print

The Dailies
Directed by
Stephanie Creaghan
Language
French or English with French and English subtitles
Origins
Quebec
Year
2021
Duration
30s to 1m30s
Genre
Video art
Format
Digital
Synopsis

Stephanie Creaghan's The Dailies is an ingenious series of very short works in which video art and cinema overlap. Nineteen titles from this series are featured in our December program as a dreamy and intimate tribute to the cinephile experience.

Stephanie Creaghan makes work about how violence inserts itself into communication, combining different pathways (like audio and video) to uncover these latent forms of manipulation to bring to light the undiscussed/repressed.

The Dailies
Bulldozer
Directed by
Pierre Harel
Language
French
Actors
Yvan Ducharme, Pauline Julien, Raymond Lévesque, Mouffe, Donald Pilon
Origins
Quebec
Year
1974
Duration
93 min
Genre
Drama
Format
35 mm
Synopsis

A rebellious film about an Abitibi junkyard, the underground and the marginal, love and freedom. An imperfect and provocative film that could only come to life at ACPAV through the insolent camerawork of a rocker filmmaker unique in our cinema.

Bulldozer

Pierre Harel

Pierre Harel is a Quebec artist. Poet, musician, actor, filmmaker and screenwriter, his fame mainly comes from his activities in the musical sphere of Quebec rock. He has written and performed with the bands Offenbach, Corbeau and Corbach, as well as releasing three solo albums.

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About Pierre Harel
Filmography
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"Bulldozer is an important film. It's surely the one that comes closest to making a film, a great Quebec film. The film that will most faithfully express the soul of Quebec, the soul of this people of nothing, of little, this subjugated, colonized people."
Robert Lévesque, 1974