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Claude Jutra

filmmaker

by

Type
Studies
Subject
Director
Keywords
Claude Jutra, director, Canada
Publishing date
Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback306 pages
6 x 8 ¾ inches (15 x 22 cm)
ISBN-10
ISBN-13
0-7735-2005-8
978-0-7735-2005-9
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Book Presentation:
The first major look at one of Canada's premier filmmakers.

Although Claude Jutra has been widely acclaimed, there has been surprisingly little critical literature about his work. Best known as the director of Mon oncle Antoine, often considered the greatest Canadian film ever made, Jutra's career spanned almost four decades - from 1948 till his death in 1986 - and exemplified major developments in Canadian cinema during that period.

Through close readings of Jutra's major films, Jim Leach analyses their distinctive cinematic qualities and discusses the responses they have received from reviewers and critics. He focuses both on the films and the historical and cultural contexts in which they were made, arguing that critics have frequently used inappropriate criteria to judge them and that these misunderstandings reveal much about attitudes to Canadian cinema in general. Jutra's films are shown to reflect the instability of their cinematic and cultural contexts and raise important questions about nationhood. Jutra always identified himself as a separatist and his films were shaped by the rapid changes in Quebec society during the Quiet Revolution and by the political tensions of the sixties and seventies. At the same time his work was often appreciated by English Canadian critics and audiences and was affected by federal film policy and institutions.

Although Jutra died in 1986, his films and career still have much to tell us about Canadian cinema and media production, and about the complex cultural contexts that underlie the ongoing debates on Canadian and Quebec nationhood.

About the Author:
Jim Leach is professor of film studies and communication studies at Brock University.

Press Reviews:
"[An] unprecedented, thorough look at the films of Claude Jutra ... the only volume in either English or French that so skilfully situates Jutra in his cinematic, cultural, and even political contexts." André Loiselle, School for Studies in Art and Culture, Carleton University.

"the first really serious analysis of several of Jutra's films in English ... an overdue and valuable work." David Clandfield, Department of French, University of Toronto.

See the

See the Claude Jutra on the website: IMDB ...

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