Jacques Leduc

Jacques Leduc

Meslek:Yönetmenlik
Doğum:1941-11-25 (84 yaşında)
Doğum Yeri:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Film Sayısı:4

Jacques Leduc (born November 25, 1941) is a Canadian film director and cinematographer. Leduc began his career in 1961 working as a film critic for the magazine Objectif. The following year, at the age of 21, he was hired as a camera assistant by the NFB. Over the course of the next few years he worked under such filmmakers as Denys Arcand, Gilles Carle, and Don Owen. In 1965 he began working as both Director and Cinematographer; his first film as director was a documentary short entitled Chantal en vrac. Leduc continued his work as Director with his first feature film in 1967 entitled Nomininque, depuis qu'il existe and his first feature documentary film in 1969 entitled Cap d'espoir. The documentary film was "about the muted violence that existed [in Quebec] and the monopoly over news held by Power Corp." and became one of the most famous cases of censorship at the NFB when it was banned by NFB commissioner Hugo McPherson. Leduc continued working on critically acclaimed films throughout the 70s and 80s such as On est loin du soleil (1970), Tendresse ordinaire (1973), and Trois pommes à côté du sommeil (1988). In 1990 he left the NFB and became a freelance filmmaker.[3] In 1992 ...

Filmler (4)

Réjeanne Padovani6.7

Réjeanne Padovani

A Militant

1973

My Eye for a Camera

My Eye for a Camera

Jacques Leduc

2001

Cinéma, cinéma7.0

Cinéma, cinéma

Self

1985

La tête au neutre

La tête au neutre

1972