Pitié pour les étranges


Poster image Pitié pour les étranges

A documentary without dialogue shot in part at la Maison du pêcheur, in Percé, featuring future members of the FLQ (Front de libération du Québec). This short film, recently rediscovered by filmmaker Félix Rose, has hardly ever been broadcast.


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Directors

Daniel PayetteDaniel Payette

Actor

Jason Todd

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In the summer of 1969, a portion of Quebec's youth — quite numerous at the time — converged on Percé, in Gaspésie. The Maison du pêcheur would become the main gathering place for these young people until the municipality used force to drive them out of town. A near-forgotten document, a film buried by the filmmaker's mother in her garden in 1970¹, Pitié pour les étranges shows rare footage of the crowd that not only came to have a good time in the region that summer, but also sharpened its social and political awareness.

In the must-see film Les Rose (Félix Rose, 2020), footage from Daniel Payette's short film was used to accompany the protagonists’ Gaspé episode. It bridged the 1968 Saint-Jean riot and the Rose brothers’ involvement with the FLQ, future members of the Chénier cell (along with Francis Simard and Bernard Lortie, both of whom they met in Percé) that would kidnap Minister Pierre Laporte in October 1970. Payette's documentary mostly features Paul Rose, but also his brother Jacques and a young Plume Latraverse, heavily bearded, guitar in hand.

Considered a “piece of evidence” by its creators, Pitié pour les étranges paints a portrait of a politicized, free, and thriving youth before it would face the federal government's War Measures and the cold confines of October’s prisons.

 

Jean-Philippe Desrochers
Critic


1. Garel, Sylvain, Le FLQ dans la cinématographie québécoise, Éditions Somme toute, Montreal, 2023, p. 74.

 

 


  • Français

    Français

    10 mn

    Language: Français
  • Année 1969
  • Pays Quebec
  • Durée 10
  • Producteur Daniel Payette
  • Langue French
  • Résumé court Unknown short documentary showing the vitality of youth and future FLQ members at the Maison du pêcheur in 1969.
  • Ordre 5

In the summer of 1969, a portion of Quebec's youth — quite numerous at the time — converged on Percé, in Gaspésie. The Maison du pêcheur would become the main gathering place for these young people until the municipality used force to drive them out of town. A near-forgotten document, a film buried by the filmmaker's mother in her garden in 1970¹, Pitié pour les étranges shows rare footage of the crowd that not only came to have a good time in the region that summer, but also sharpened its social and political awareness.

In the must-see film Les Rose (Félix Rose, 2020), footage from Daniel Payette's short film was used to accompany the protagonists’ Gaspé episode. It bridged the 1968 Saint-Jean riot and the Rose brothers’ involvement with the FLQ, future members of the Chénier cell (along with Francis Simard and Bernard Lortie, both of whom they met in Percé) that would kidnap Minister Pierre Laporte in October 1970. Payette's documentary mostly features Paul Rose, but also his brother Jacques and a young Plume Latraverse, heavily bearded, guitar in hand.

Considered a “piece of evidence” by its creators, Pitié pour les étranges paints a portrait of a politicized, free, and thriving youth before it would face the federal government's War Measures and the cold confines of October’s prisons.

 

Jean-Philippe Desrochers
Critic


1. Garel, Sylvain, Le FLQ dans la cinématographie québécoise, Éditions Somme toute, Montreal, 2023, p. 74.

 

 


  • Français

    Français


    Duration: 10 minutes
    Language: Français
    10 mn
  • Année 1969
  • Pays Quebec
  • Durée 10
  • Producteur Daniel Payette
  • Langue French
  • Résumé court Unknown short documentary showing the vitality of youth and future FLQ members at the Maison du pêcheur in 1969.
  • Ordre 5

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