Thunder River


Poster image Thunder River

An intense exercise of looking at a rockface shot near the waterfalls of Rivière-au-Tonnerre, on the North Shore of the St-Lawrence river. A meditation about opacity, about the fissures that can open up anything, any situation, on the infinity of meaning. It is the ontological moment, the moment of pure seeing, amongst the episodes of the Places and Monuments series that is a project of exploration of the fissures that crack any banal scene of daily life, any anonymous crowd, any forgotten monument, and that let seek through, until it explodes, the invisible constellations of history.

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Director

Pierre Hébert

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With this short film from his series Places and Monuments, Pierre Hébert returns to a less multidisciplinary approach, more in line with our contemporary understanding of an animated short. The early stages of the project began with filmed shots of a rocky cliff face on the Saint-Lawrence’s northern shore, but these were quickly blended into abstract designs, initiating what the filmmaker called “a meditation on opacity.” Graphically, the film resembles Hébert’s drawings from the same era: the exhibition Tropismes (an homage to Nathalie Sarraute), accompanied by a catalogue, opened in the same year. We also see the influence of Danish filmmaker Leif Marcussen, to whom Thunder River is dedicated. Heir to the throne of Norman McLaren, Marcussen, a friend of Hébert’s, created Sten (which translates to “Rocks”) in 1982. In this short film, Marcussen invites the viewer to gaze on rocky outcroppings and amuses himself by revealing the outlines of real objects in the images, demonstrating the viewer’s tendency to interpret and project explicit content onto apparently abstract shapes, beyond the filmmaker’s intentions. Thunder River’s score was edited by Italian musician Andrea Martignoni and was recorded at a performance with Pierre Hébert two months after shooting the documentary footage that served as a scaffold for the film.



Marcel Jean
Executive director, Cinémathèque québécoise

  • Année 2011
  • Pays Quebec
  • Durée 8
  • Producteur Pierre Hébert
  • Langue Without dialogue
  • Sous-titres
  • Résumé court A rockface on the Côte-Nord region. A meditation about opacity, about the fissures that can open up anything, any situation on the infinity of meaning.
  • Compositeur
  • Mention festival
  • Programmateur Marcel Jean|Directeur général de la Cinémathèque québécoise;
  • Feministe equitable

With this short film from his series Places and Monuments, Pierre Hébert returns to a less multidisciplinary approach, more in line with our contemporary understanding of an animated short. The early stages of the project began with filmed shots of a rocky cliff face on the Saint-Lawrence’s northern shore, but these were quickly blended into abstract designs, initiating what the filmmaker called “a meditation on opacity.” Graphically, the film resembles Hébert’s drawings from the same era: the exhibition Tropismes (an homage to Nathalie Sarraute), accompanied by a catalogue, opened in the same year. We also see the influence of Danish filmmaker Leif Marcussen, to whom Thunder River is dedicated. Heir to the throne of Norman McLaren, Marcussen, a friend of Hébert’s, created Sten (which translates to “Rocks”) in 1982. In this short film, Marcussen invites the viewer to gaze on rocky outcroppings and amuses himself by revealing the outlines of real objects in the images, demonstrating the viewer’s tendency to interpret and project explicit content onto apparently abstract shapes, beyond the filmmaker’s intentions. Thunder River’s score was edited by Italian musician Andrea Martignoni and was recorded at a performance with Pierre Hébert two months after shooting the documentary footage that served as a scaffold for the film.



Marcel Jean
Executive director, Cinémathèque québécoise

  • Année 2011
  • Pays Quebec
  • Durée 8
  • Producteur Pierre Hébert
  • Langue Without dialogue
  • Sous-titres
  • Résumé court A rockface on the Côte-Nord region. A meditation about opacity, about the fissures that can open up anything, any situation on the infinity of meaning.
  • Compositeur
  • Mention festival
  • Programmateur Marcel Jean|Directeur général de la Cinémathèque québécoise;
  • Feministe equitable

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