Isabelle Stachtchenko is a Canadian cinematographer,[1] most noted for her work on the 2024 film Universal Language.[2]
She began her career in the early 2010s, working on short films and music videos until gaining her first major feature film credit on Sophie Bédard Marcotte's Winter Claire (Claire l'hiver).[3] Her subsequent credits have included The Greatest Country in the World (Le Meilleur pays du monde),[1] L.A. Tea Time,[4] This House (Cette maison),[5] How to Get Your Parents to Divorce (Pas d'chicane dans ma cabane!),[6] and Afterwards (Après-coups).
In 2020 she was one of the creators of Anthologie 2020, a short documentary "chain letter" film about the COVID-19 pandemic in Quebec which was screened at the 2021 Festival du nouveau cinéma.[7]
- ^ a b Frédéric Bouchard, "L’approche cinématographique de « Kanata » rejoint les préoccupations esthétiques d’Isabelle Stachtchenko". Qui Fait Quoi, January 13, 2018.
- ^ Sarah Shachat, "Cannes 2024 Cinematography: Cameras and Lenses Used to Shoot 59 Films". IndieWire, May 17, 2024.
- ^ Charles-Henri Ramond, "Claire l’hiver – Film de Sophie Bédard Marcotte". Films du Québec, March 24, 2018.
- ^ Pat Mullen, "Hot Docs Review: ‘L.A. Tea Time’". Point of View, June 2, 2020.
- ^ Manon Dumais, "«Cette maison»: éloge de la chère disparue". Le Devoir, February 10, 2023.
- ^ "« PAS D’CHICANE DANS MA CABANE » : nouveau film jeunesse de Sandrine Brodeur-Desrosiers en tournage". CTVM, September 15, 2021.
- ^ "Le Festival du nouveau cinéma dévoile les courts métrages de sa 50e édition". Qui Fait Quoi, September 22, 2021.