Jacques and November | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jean Beaudry François Bouvier |
Written by | Jean Beaudry François Bouvier |
Produced by | François Bouvier Marcel Simard[1] |
Starring | Jean Beaudry |
Cinematography | Serge Giguère |
Edited by | Jean Beaudry |
Music by | Michel Rivard |
Production company | Les Productions du Lundi Matin |
Release date |
|
Running time | 72 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | French |
Jacques and November (French: Jacques et novembre) is a 1984 Canadian drama film directed by Jean Beaudry and François Bouvier.[2] The film was selected as the Canadian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 58th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.[3]
The film stars Beaudry as Jacques Landry, a man in his early 30s who is dying of an unspecified incurable disease and documenting his thoughts on mortality in a video diary; simultaneously, his friend Denis (Pierre Rousseau) is trying to make a higher-budget documentary film about him.[4]
Critics largely analyzed the film not as focusing on death as such, but as an affirming and uplifting look at the meaning that friends and family bring to life.[5] Although Jacques Landry's terminal illness was not specified in the film, the LGBT magazine The Body Politic reviewed it as an HIV/AIDS allegory, directly comparing and contrasting its views of mortality with the contemporaneous HIV/AIDS-themed documentary film No Sad Songs.[6]