Immigrant cabbie connects nervous filmmaker, lawyer, mystery man, possibly HIV gay man. Comedy and tragedy mingle, awash in philosophy.Immigrant cabbie connects nervous filmmaker, lawyer, mystery man, possibly HIV gay man. Comedy and tragedy mingle, awash in philosophy.Immigrant cabbie connects nervous filmmaker, lawyer, mystery man, possibly HIV gay man. Comedy and tragedy mingle, awash in philosophy.
- Awards
- 4 nominations
Sebastien Joannette
- L'individu (segment: L'individu)
- (as Sébastien Joannette)
Eve Gadouas
- La jeune fille dans le corridor (segment: L'individu)
- (as Ève Gadouas)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe hotel lobby is actually Place Ville-Marie's lobby, (in Montréal, Canada).
- GoofsWhen Cosmos (the taxi driver) arrives to help Fanny, her car hood is opened. When he starts the process of boosting her car, the hood is closed.
- SoundtracksBeloved Angels
Lyrics & Music: Mike Webber
performed by The Snitches
Featured review
I enjoyed this joint effort mainly because of the work of Denis Villeneuve and André Turpin.
For a 1996 movie, Villeneuve's take on so-called underground cybernetic culture is quite insightful and at the same time, light and funny. Convincefully played by David Lahaye.
André Turpin's short, "Jules & Fanny", is thoroughly funny and original. It showcases two persons whose on-screen personalities have nothing spectacular (Jules is a rather small guy, Fanny is a typical woman next door) and yet in a short time we are brought to be fascinated by their personalities. This was before "Matroni & Moi" and "Bureaux", so we weren't quite as fed up with Martin's obsession with the death of god yet.
Turpin's camera work also holds the film together. Otherwise, Manon Briand segment is extremely predictable, not to say boring (let me guess.. it's about someone who happens to be gay), M-J Dallaire's short is amateurish and completely lacking in substance, Jennifer Alleyn's effort is a tribute to her own personal nostalgia with French Theatre of the 1950s, while Paragamian's finale is just not very entertaining.
I'd give it a 9 if it were for VIlleneuve's and Turpin's segments alone.
For a 1996 movie, Villeneuve's take on so-called underground cybernetic culture is quite insightful and at the same time, light and funny. Convincefully played by David Lahaye.
André Turpin's short, "Jules & Fanny", is thoroughly funny and original. It showcases two persons whose on-screen personalities have nothing spectacular (Jules is a rather small guy, Fanny is a typical woman next door) and yet in a short time we are brought to be fascinated by their personalities. This was before "Matroni & Moi" and "Bureaux", so we weren't quite as fed up with Martin's obsession with the death of god yet.
Turpin's camera work also holds the film together. Otherwise, Manon Briand segment is extremely predictable, not to say boring (let me guess.. it's about someone who happens to be gay), M-J Dallaire's short is amateurish and completely lacking in substance, Jennifer Alleyn's effort is a tribute to her own personal nostalgia with French Theatre of the 1950s, while Paragamian's finale is just not very entertaining.
I'd give it a 9 if it were for VIlleneuve's and Turpin's segments alone.
- How long is Cosmos?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
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