Noël Mitrani
Noël Mitrani | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Sorbonne University |
Occupation | Film director, Producer and Writer |
Years active | 1999–present |
Noël Mitrani (born 11 November 1969 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian-born French film director, producer and screenwriter.[1]
Often working on the fringes of the system, Mitrani produces personal and independent films. His universe is marked by his dual French and Canadian culture and by his fascination with characters confronted with their past and their inner torments. In all his films, Mitrani describes individuals grappling with their moral temptations. Its cinema is populated by strong female characters who assert themselves in front of often immature men.
Biography[]
1999–2005: Early work in France[]
Born in Toronto from French parents, he went back to France age of 5.[1] A graduate of history and philosophy at the Sorbonne, and for some time a press illustrator, Noël Mitrani entered cinema as a writer. He directed his first short film After Shave in 1999, a comedy set in a suburban supermarket, broadcast on Canal+.
Three other short films followed, the last of which Les Siens (broadcast on France 3 in 2003) addresses the confusion possible between dream and reality.
2006: Breakthrough with On the Trail of Igor Rizzi (Sur la trace d'Igor Rizzi)[]
In 2005, Mitrani established his own production company, StanKaz Films, and produced his first feature-length film On the Trail of Igor Rizzi (Sur la trace d'Igor Rizzi), a black comedy starring Laurent Lucas and Isabelle Blais.[2] The film won the Toronto International Film Festival Award for Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival.[3][4] In Cahiers du cinéma Charles-Stéphane Roy underlines the "quirky humor" of a film which "won the admiration of critics". The Toronto Film Review ranks the film among the top 100 Canadian films. According to the Toronto Star, "Mitrani's first feature, On the Trail of Igor Rizzi has all the earmarks – pink from cold though they may be – of a confidently assured and dangerously promising new talent".[5]
Thanks to the critical success of his first film, Mitrani obtained a significant budget to direct The Kate Logan Affair (2010), a dark and mysterious thriller starring Alexis Bledel playing a psychologically unstable police woman who makes a big mistake and tries to clean it up.[6] This film explores the seemingly harmless lines we sometimes cross, and the consequences which those actions ultimately have on those around us; and ourselves.
2013–present: An independent filmmaker[]
His third picture The Military Man (Le Militaire), released in 2014, is a drama about a former French soldier, whose trauma caused by his memories of conflict leads him towards an unhealthy relationship with women. An entirely independent production shot guerrilla-style in two weeks on the streets of Montreal in Super 16, The Military Man pulls the audience into a troubling downward spiral of paranoia.[7]
In his 2017 film Afterwards (Après coup), Mitrani dissects the insidiousness of guilt as well as the unsuspected possibilities of survival.
Noël Mitrani, who shot four films with actor Laurent Lucas, defines their collaboration as follows : “We have incredible coordination when it comes to emotions and feelings. I give him actions to do without needing to give him the reasons for it. You never need to intellectualize roles. I make the characters and Laurent gives them all their humanity thanks to his sober and finesse play ”.
In Cassy (2019), childhood and grieving confront some hot-button issues when sexual harassment enters the scene. Natacha Mitrani, the director’s daughter, is heartbreaking in the challenging role of Cassy. The theme of sexual harassment gradually appears in this story, leading to a very brutal ending.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, he participated in the Greetings from Isolation project which brings together many Canadian filmmakers who testify to their experience of confinement by making a short film.[8]
In 2020, Mitrani is filming Between Them (Toutes les deux),[9] a romantic comedy between two women, against a backdrop of male jealousy. Without addressing the issue of COVID-19 lockdowns, the filmmaker has integrated the context of the COVID-19 pandemic into his story.[10] In the style of a spy comedy with romantic overtones, Mitrani rediscovers, after several dramatic films, the quirky humor of his first film On the Trail of Igor Rizzi.
Filmography[]
(feature-length films)
- On the Trail of Igor Rizzi (Sur la trace d'Igor Rizzi) - 2006
- The Kate Logan Affair - 2010
- The Military Man (Le Militaire) - 2013
- Afterwards (Après coup) - 2017
- Cassy - 2019
- Between Them (Toutes les deux) - 2021
(short films)
- After Shave - broadcast on Canal+, 1999
- The Caudine Forks (Les Fourches caudines) - (as a screenwriter) - 1999
- Bad Start (Mal barré) - 2000
- Underground Parking (Viol à la tire), (alternative title : Le Parking souterrain) - 2001
- His (Les Siens) - broadcast on France 3, 2001
- To Limit the Spread - The Greetings from Isolation Project - 2021
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b "In film and life, all roads lead to Montreal". Montreal Gazette, January 15, 2007.
- ^ "'On the Trail of Igor Rizzi': Trip to nowhere". Toronto Star, February 2, 2007.
- ^ "Winners a list of surprises". The Globe and Mail, September 18, 2006.
- ^ "Tall Poppy Interview: Noël Mitrani, Director". 30 January 2007.
- ^ "'On the Trail of Igor Rizzi': Trip to nowhere". 2 February 2007.
- ^ https://www.pressreader.com/canada/montreal-gazette/20091012/281681135935638
- ^ "Festival Scope".
- ^ "Noël Mitrani".
- ^ https://tiglff.com/event/between-them-toutes-les-deux/
- ^ Charles-Henri Ramond, "Noël Mitrani en montage". Films du Québec, September 22, 2020.
External links[]
- Noël Mitrani at IMDb
- Canadian emigrants to France
- Franco-Ontarian people
- French film directors
- University of Paris alumni
- Canadian male screenwriters
- Canadian screenwriters in French
- French male screenwriters
- 1969 births
- Living people
- Film directors from Toronto
- Writers from Toronto
- 20th-century Canadian screenwriters
- 21st-century Canadian screenwriters