| Trouble-Maker | |
|---|---|
| French | Trouble fête | 
| Directed by | Pierre Patry | 
| Written by | Pierre Patry Jean-Claude Lord  | 
| Produced by | Jean Roy Pierre Patry Roger Blais  | 
| Starring | Lucien Hamelin Louise Rémy Jean Duceppe Yves Létourneau Gilbert Chénier  | 
| Cinematography | Jean Roy | 
| Edited by | Lucien Marleau | 
| Music by | Claude Léveillée | 
Production company  | Coopératio  | 
Release date  | 1964 | 
| Country | Canada | 
| Language | French | 
Trouble-Maker (French: Trouble fête) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Pierre Patry and released in 1964.[1]
The film stars Lucien Hamelin as Lucien, a student at a religious school who begins to rebel against the strict moral order of the Roman Catholic priests.[2]
It was made over 25 days on a shoestring budget,[1] and adapted some aspects of the direct cinema style of filmmaking.[1] The film is typically analyzed by critics as an allegory for the Quiet Revolution,[2] although its criticism of the Catholic church saw Patry threatened with excommunication.[3]
The film was a Canadian Film Award finalist for Best Motion Picture in 1964.[4]
References
- 1 2 3 "1964 Revisited: The Sense of a Beginning". Film in Canada, 2006.
 - 1 2 "Les curiosités du cinéma québécois: TROUBLE-FÊTE (1964)". La Presse, June 30, 2018.
 - ↑ "Film caused a stir in 1963". Sudbury Star, September 24, 2000.
 - ↑ "Porpoise Documentary Wins Top Canadian Award". The Globe and Mail, May 9, 1964.
 
External links
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