Et au pire, on se mariera
Filmmaker Léa Pool has been creating unique work in Quebec cinematography for several decades. In addition to asking genre questions since her first films, she asserted since her beginnings a sharp, precise look at the paths of individuals at the crossroads, carried by subjective, existential quests, nourished by an exemplary narrative breath and a mastery of the image.
In the presence of the director
Et au pire, on se mariera is the story of Aisha, of those who love her, of this love that devours and destroys. Alone with her mother Isabelle, Aïcha does not forgive her mother for throwing out her Algerian stepfather whom she adored. She still hopes that he will come back for her. When she meets Baz, a guy twice her age, it's love at first sight, the real one, the strong one, the one that hurts. He only wants to help this young girl who seems lost but she wants much more from him and she is ready to do anything to get it. To follow Aisha is to enter a labyrinth and get lost in it as much as she does...
Léa Pool
Léa Pool was born and raised in Switzerland, before emigrating to Quebec in 1975 at the age of 25. After studying communication, she taught cinema and video at UQAM, while producing TV programs and her first films. Esteemed by the public and the critics alike, the works she produced in the 80’s (Strass Café, La femme de l'hôtel, Anne Trister, À corps perdu), stood out at international festivals and already bear witness to the filmmaker's favorite themes: quests for individual meaning, feminine trajectories, intimate relationships... Her fiction work of the 90’s cemented her place in Quebec cinematography while she started to veer towards documentary cinema. Over the past two decades, Léa Pool has produced several international co-productions, as well as her greatest public success: La passion d’Augustine (2015). Her work has been regularly honored around the world, earning her prestigious distinctions.
Photo : Monic Richard
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Léa Pool: the one who reivented herself as a filmmaker
Few women were directors in Quebec when Léa Pool made her debut. She says that she has never made this femininity a driving force or seen it as a brake, but she has patiently built a body of work paying homage to women through complex mother-daughter relationships. Meeting with the one whose painful childhood ended up being scarred by the cinema.