Through the juxtaposition of moments so natural they seem stolen from the city itself, _City Dawn_ recreates the reality of a winter morning. Black-and-white fragments are layered with narrative snippets, delivered with the spontaneity of the moment. As the sun rises, a woman treads through the snow, a silhouette stands out against the whiteness of a park, a window washer and a waitress go about their tasks, and workers wait for the bus. Sung or murmured in Italian, Persian, Vietnamese, and Québécois, these voices blend seamlessly with the stunning imagery by Michel Lamothe and Serge Giguère. Their composition evokes an off-screen world that is both immense and elusive, inhabited by modest lives and quiet individuals whose stories remain mysterious.
Director | Jeannine Gagné |
Actor | Richard Brouillette |
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City Dawn explodes the usual narrative of direct cinema, walking a line stretched tautly between the multitude of origins and destinies that jostle each other in small, anodyne mornings. Entangled in the grey-slack of the dawn hours in the month of March, spectres of everyday life slowly leave their trace in an interlacing of anonymous stories that come to form a synthesis that is nothing less than History itself. Jeannine Gagné gives meaning to the great stirring of the small moments that make up the lives of the excluded, of all those breadwinners who get up early to prepare the city for "real business," to come later. The spectator is carried away–like the angel in Wings of Desire--in the reflections, the anguish, the chanting, and the swarming of the forgotten, transfigured in the great kaleidoscopic echo that gives them, for once, both a memory and a voice. In this, the filmmaker adopts a format similar to her first film, Sans faire d’histoire, co-directed with Michel Lamothe, her faithful accomplice. She multiplies the interplay between sound and image, recorded separately, in a virtuosic collage à la Lipsett where image and dialogue editor Louise Dugal and sound designer Claude Beaugrand’s manifold talents can freely express themselves.
Richard Brouillette
Filmmaker, producer, chicken farmer, and accountant
City Dawn explodes the usual narrative of direct cinema, walking a line stretched tautly between the multitude of origins and destinies that jostle each other in small, anodyne mornings. Entangled in the grey-slack of the dawn hours in the month of March, spectres of everyday life slowly leave their trace in an interlacing of anonymous stories that come to form a synthesis that is nothing less than History itself. Jeannine Gagné gives meaning to the great stirring of the small moments that make up the lives of the excluded, of all those breadwinners who get up early to prepare the city for "real business," to come later. The spectator is carried away–like the angel in Wings of Desire--in the reflections, the anguish, the chanting, and the swarming of the forgotten, transfigured in the great kaleidoscopic echo that gives them, for once, both a memory and a voice. In this, the filmmaker adopts a format similar to her first film, Sans faire d’histoire, co-directed with Michel Lamothe, her faithful accomplice. She multiplies the interplay between sound and image, recorded separately, in a virtuosic collage à la Lipsett where image and dialogue editor Louise Dugal and sound designer Claude Beaugrand’s manifold talents can freely express themselves.
Richard Brouillette
Filmmaker, producer, chicken farmer, and accountant
FR - Aube urbaine
EN - Aube urbaine