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Nelly (2016 film)

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3.1/5
AlloCine

Produced by
  
Nicole Robert

Edited by
  
Mathieu Bouchard-Malo

Director
  
Screenplay
  
6.4/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Anne Émond

Screenplay by
  
Anne Émond

Initial release
  
9 September 2016

Producer
  
Nicole Robert

Nelly (2016 film) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen77fNel

Based on
  
Folle (and other works)by Nelly Arcan

Starring
  
Mylène MackayMickaël GouinSylvie DrapeauMylia Corbeil-GavreauFrancis Leplay

Cast
  
Mylène Mackay, Marie-Claude Guérin, Emmanuel Schwartz

Nominations
  
Canadian Screen Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography

Similar
  
Poverty and Other Delights, Rejeanne Padovani, The Saver, Nuit #1, The Woman Who Drinks

Nelly l interview fiff 2016


Nelly is a 2016 Canadian biographical-drama film directed by Anne Émond and starring Mylène Mackay as Nelly Arcan, an award-winning Canadian author and former prostitute who committed suicide in 2009. The film is based on some of Arcan's own writings, including her book Folle.

Contents

After debuting at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival, the film received some positive reviews, including for Mackay's performance. It was nominated for two Canadian Screen Awards and won for Best Costume Design.

Fff 2016 trailer nelly


Production

The film is a biopic of the deceased writer Nelly Arcan, starring Mylène Mackay. Producer Nicole Robert intended to make a film adaptation of Arcan's book Putain while Arcan was still alive. She obtained the rights in 2003.

Director Anne Émond said she had re-read Arcan's books on multiple occasions, desiring to make a film adaptation. Robert recommended to her that she direct the film about Arcan. Émond spent a year writing a 102-page screenplay, then opted to rewrite it. It was finished after two years. Given the subject matter of the books, Émond said she was not reluctant to depict nudity and sexual content.

To play the part, Mylène Mackay learned to adjust her physical movements and speech, as well as her hair. She did not meet Arcan's family. For the clothing, costume designer Patricia McNeil collaborated with Simon Bélanger and José Manuel St-Jacques of UNTTLD, drawing inspiration from Marilyn Monroe. The film was shot in various locations, including an apartment in Saint-Zotique, Quebec, with two days in Paris, on a budget of $4.1 million.

Release

The film had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in the Vanguard section in September 2016.

The film was released in Montreal on 20 January 2017. In Quebec, the Régie du cinéma gave the film a 16+ rating, which is rare except for soft-core pornography films.

Critical reception

On 7 December 2016, the film was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual Canada's Top 10 list. In The Globe and Mail, Julia Cooper called the film "electric," combining fiction and biography. Maxime Demers of Le Journal de Montréal praised Mackay for extraordinary acting.

The Montreal Gazette's T'cha Dunlevy awarded the film four stars, praising Mackay for "a towering performance" and finding dimensions in the story. In La Presse, Chantal Guy gave the film three and half stars, saying Émond avoided a giving sad and dull take on Arcan's suicide, and credited Mackay for her energetic efforts. In Voir, Jean-Baptiste Hervé said Mackay's performance had great impact and the film transcended the typical biographical film. Martin Gignac, writing for Métro, found the film intelligent and emotionally distant. Conversely, Sophie Durocher wrote in Le Journal de Montréal that she was disappointed with the film's derivative style, whereas Arcan had a unique voice.

Analysis

In Le Devoir, University of Sherbrooke Professor Isabelle Boisclair and PhD student Catherine Dussault Frenette wrote that the film was a biography of Arcan, but the real Arcan was not interested in a biographical approach. They felt the film confined Arcan to a certain character.

Université du Québec à Montréal Professor Martine Delvaux judged the film to be a study on various ways of seeing Arcan, as her original identity of Isabelle Fortier, as alter ego "Cynthia," as the public Nelly Arcan, and as Émond's invention. Delvaux concluded the film did not truly reveal who Arcan was.

References

Nelly (2016 film) Wikipedia