In a style evocative of Fellini at his most surreal, this bizarre French Canadian fantasy follows the romance between a young filmmaker and a bearded lady from a local circus during the 1960s. The story begins in a contemporary theater where a projectionist describes, to movie director Rex Prince, the ghostly spirit that seems to be haunting his film. The story then races backward to the 1960s when a half-mad, idealistic Rex was busily making his first film, a Marxist tract depicting poverty in Montreal. Edouard Dore, a well-connected editor works with him and it is he who takes Rex to a carnival late one night to meet the performers in a freakshow. The first person Rex meets is Le Grand Zenon, a hulking one-eyed fellow with the amazing ability to use his eye to project movie images on a screen with neither a projector nor film.
Title | The Countess of Baton Rouge |
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Year | 1997 |
Genre | Romance, Comedy |
Country | Canada |
Studio | Max Films |
Cast | Robin Aubert, Geneviève Brouillette, Isabel Richer, David Boutin, Frédéric Desager, Gaston Lepage |
Crew | André Forcier (Director) |
Keyword | |
Release | Sep 17, 1997 |
Runtime | 94 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 5.00 / 10 by 5 users |
Popularity | 3 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | Français |