Nadia, Butterfly | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pascal Plante |
Written by | Pascal Plante |
Produced by | Dominique Dussault |
Starring | Katerine Savard Ariane Mainville Hilary Caldwell Pierre-Yves Cardinal |
Cinematography | Stéphanie Weber Biron |
Edited by | Amélie Labrèche |
Production company | Nemesis Films |
Distributed by | Maison 4:3 |
Release date |
|
Running time | 107 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Languages | French English |
Nadia, Butterfly is a 2020 Canadian sports drama film, directed by Pascal Plante and released in 2020. [1]
The film stars Katerine Savard as Nadia, an Olympic swimmer struggling to redefine her life after retiring from the sport at the conclusion of the 2020 Summer Olympics. Its cast also includes Canadian competitive swimmers Ariane Mainville and Hilary Caldwell in supporting roles as Nadia's friends and teammates, as well as Pierre-Yves Cardinal.
Plante wrote the film in part based on his own experiences as a competitive swimmer who tried out, but did not qualify, to represent Canada at the 2008 Summer Olympics. He has described the film as "basically a film about the post-Olympic blues, the very tipping point of that transition from being an athlete to having to redefine herself and understanding what it means to leave it all behind". [1] Savard, an Olympic swimmer, auditioned for the role after being one of the swimmers Plante consulted for input into the screenplay. [2] [3] The film was shot in Montreal and Tokyo in 2019, with swimming scenes filmed at Montreal's real Olympic Pool from the 1976 Summer Olympics. [4] [5]
The film was named as an Official Selection of the 2020 Cannes Film Festival, but was not screened due to the cancellation of the physical festival in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. [1] It instead premiered at the 2020 Quebec City Film Festival, [6] and had its commercial premiere on September 18, 2020. [7]
For The Hollywood Reporter , David Rooney wrote that "Most movies about the physical rigors and psychological toll that force high-performance athletes to give up their chosen discipline — whether it's swimming, track and field, ballet or any other — tend to focus on the pain and injuries, the punishing schedule, the exhaustion, the disappointments of a career in decline. What makes Plante's drama distinctive is that the decision to quit has already been made both privately and publicly, and the detachment is already in process as Nadia (Katerine Savard) gives an awkward press interview while she's still catching her breath after an individual race toward the close of the Tokyo Summer Olympics. "I guess I'm trying to end on a good note", she says, visibly anxious to step away". [8]
Writing for The Globe and Mail , Barry Hertz stated that the unfortunate coincidence of the film's timing, having been filmed before but released after the cancellation of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, gave the film's setting at that event an unintentional veneer of alternate history. He opined that "while Savard has her moments - including a deep cry backstage after capturing the bronze - she is not strong enough to do the heavy emotional lifting that the film's script requires. As written by Plante, Nadia is a woman at constant war with her instincts, requiring a performer to find a way to wordlessly convey such tension on-screen. Savard mostly offers faraway stares, frequently looking lost and in need of micro-managed direction". He concluded that the film "is not quite a medallist. But it's certainly a spirited contender". [9]
Chris Knight of the National Post also concurred that the film's setting at an event that was cancelled in reality technically made it a science fiction movie, but praised Savard and the other non-professional actors in the cast for their naturalistic performances. He rated the film 4.5 stars out of five, concluding that "Nadia, Butterfly doesn’t feature any fireworks beyond the literal kind that mark those Games that never actually took place. But it doesn’t need to. The introspection and contemplative mood are all that is required to pull the viewer into this woman’s world. Nadia may have only come in third place at the Olympics, but Nadia, Butterfly takes the gold". [10]
The film was named to TIFF's year-end Canada's Top Ten list for feature films. [11]
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) | Result | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Association québécoise des critiques de cinéma | May 7, 2021 | Prix Luc-Perreault | Pascal Plante | Won | [12] |
Canadian Cinema Editors | June 3, 2021 | Best Editing in a Feature Film | Amélie Labrèche | Nominated | [13] |
Canadian Screen Awards | May 20, 2021 | Best Picture | Dominique Dussault | Nominated | [14] |
Best Director | Pascal Plante | Nominated | |||
Best Cinematography | Stéphanie Weber Biron | Nominated | |||
Prix collégial du cinéma québécois | 2021 | Best Film | Nadia, Butterfly | Nominated | [15] |
Prix Iris | June 6, 2021 | Best Film | Dominique Dussault | Nominated | [16] |
Best Sound | Stéphane Bergeron, Olivier Calvert, Martyne Morin | Nominated | |||
Most Successful Film Outside Quebec | Pascal Plante, Dominique Dussault | Nominated | |||
Vancouver International Film Festival | September 24–October 7, 2020 | Best Canadian Feature Film - Special Mention | Pascal Plante | Won | [17] |
Katerine Savard is a Canadian competitive swimmer who specializes in women's butterfly events and freestyle relay. She holds several Canadian national records in the butterfly over the 50-, 100-, and 200-metre distances in both the short and long courses. Savard also holds the Canadian junior butterfly record in the 200-metre event. She won the gold medal at the 100-metre butterfly event at the 2013 Summer Universiade, held in Kazan. Savard also won gold at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in the 100-metre butterfly in Glasgow, where she set the Commonwealth record in the process. At the same games, she won a bronze medal as a member of the women's 4×100-metre medley relay team.
Hilary Caldwell is a Canadian competition swimmer who trains in Victoria, British Columbia. She won a bronze medal in the 200 m backstroke at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Caldwell won a bronze medal in the same event at the 2013 World Aquatics Championships, as well as a bronze at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in the 200 m backstroke. She won a gold in the 200 m backstroke at the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto.
Monia Chokri is a Canadian actress and filmmaker.
Sophie Deraspe is a Canadian director, scenarist, director of photography and producer. Prominent in new Quebec cinema, she is known for a 2015 documentary The Amina Profile, an exploration of the Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari hoax of 2011. She had previously written and directed the narrative feature films Missing Victor Pellerin in 2006, Vital Signs in 2009, The Wolves in 2015,
Rebecca Smith is a Canadian swimmer. She represented Canada at the 2020 Summer Olympics, winning a silver medal in the 4×100 metre freestyle relay, and is a multi-medallist at the World Aquatics Championships, World Swimming Championships, Commonwealth Games, and Pan Pacific Swimming Championships.
Resurrecting Hassan is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Carlo Guillermo Proto and released in 2016. The documentary centres on the Hartings, a family of blind musicians in Montreal who supported themselves by busking in the Guy-Concordia station of the Montreal Metro.
The Prix Luc-Perreault, formerly known as the Prix L.-E.-Ouimet-Molson, is an annual Canadian film award, presented by the Association québécoise des critiques de cinéma to a film deemed to be the best film of the year from Quebec, from among the films screening at that year's Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma.
Québec Cinéma is a Canadian organization based in Quebec, whose mission is to promote and develop the Cinema of Quebec.
Windigo is a Canadian dramatic film directed by Robert Morin and released in 1994. The screenplay was based, in part, on Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness.
Simon-Pierre Savard-Tremblay is a Canadian politician who was elected to the House of Commons in the 2019 federal election. Savard-Tremblay represents the electoral district of Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot as a member of the Bloc Québécois.
Sympathy for the Devil is a 2019 war drama film directed by Guillaume de Fontenay and released in 2019. Based on the book of the same name by French war correspondent Paul Marchand, the film stars Niels Schneider as Marchand covering the Bosnian War in the 1990s.
Pascal Plante is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from Quebec, whose debut feature film, Fake Tattoos , premiered in 2017.
Call Me Human is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Kim O'Bomsawin and released in 2020. The film is a portrait of Innu poet Joséphine Bacon.
Finlay Knox is a Canadian competitive swimmer.
Babysitter is a 2022 Canadian comedy-drama film, directed by Monia Chokri. Adapted from a theatrical play by Catherine Léger, the film stars Patrick Hivon as Cédric, a man who goes viral after video surfaces of him drunkenly kissing a reporter during a live broadcast. Meanwhile, his wife Nadine (Chokri) is struggling with post-partum depression following the birth of their child. Cédric hires a babysitter to take care of the baby, to the surprise of Nadine, with whom she eventually develops her own special relationship.
Still Night, Still Light is a Canadian drama film, directed by Sophie Goyette and released in 2016. The film stars Éliane Préfontaine as Éliane, a woman dealing with depression who temporarily abandons her life in Montreal and travels to Mexico City, where she stays at a home owned by Romes and takes a job teaching his son to play piano; Romes, meanwhile, is planning to accompany his ailing father Pablo on a trip to Asia which may be Pablo's last major dream in his life.
Ella Christina Jansen is a Canadian competitive swimmer specializing in freestyle, butterfly and individual medley events.