Trouble-fête (1964)

 

Nighttime is often the wrong time for our protagonist, Lucien, in Pierre Patry’s explosive Trouble-fête, an early example feature filmmaking in Quebec channeling the frustrations and the desire for change that fuelled the Quiet Revolution. In other words, nighttime may be associated with bohemianism and liberation at times in this film, but it is also connected to some of the narrative’s greatest conflicts and tensions (hooliganism, homophobia, manslaughter, death).

From our perspective as viewers, however, nighttime is often the right time in this film, because so many of its nocturnal sequences, as captured by veteran cinematographer Jean Roy, are so breathtaking. From the film’s opening moments featuring a gang of young roustabouts cruising along rue Sainte-Catherine, to its chase scene that begins at the belvedere Camilien-Houde and continues through the streets and alleys of the Plateau and Little Italy, to its climactic finale in centre-ville against the backdrop of the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day Parade, Montreal by night circa 1963 is a major focus of this film.

“Faîtes votre choix! Les jeux sont faits! La révolution tranquille est en marche!”

If you’d like to check out this early youthquake film (it was marketed as a controversial film, a “film-choc”) set in the colleges, jazz clubs, and streets of Montreal, you can find it HERE.

aj

[Montreal by night; nocturnal cinematography; rue Ste-Catherine; Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day; restaurants; police; car chases; cruising; drag racing; troublemakers]

Super Bus (1969)

A school bus gets souped-up like a Canadian version of Furthur, but instead of carrying Ken Kesey and his Merry Band of Pranksters across America, here the bus transports a psychedelic rock band across Canada, a mari usque ad mare. This unnamed band plays to audiences from time to time, most notably on the beach of Vancouver’s Stanley Park. Ultimately, the bus’s destination is the Pacific Coast, where it is loaded on a freighter so it can travel the seas to Japan. The film was produced by the National Film Board of Canada for Expo ‘70 in Osaka. I’m assuming that’s where the Super Bus was destined.

Soon after its stunning transformation from a lowly school bus into its psychedelic alter-ego, Super Bus makes an appearance in Montreal, the first major city on its trans-Canadian tour.

fig. a: Saint Catherine St.

fig. b: thumbs up!

fig. c: Dorchester Blvd.

To see this crazy film for yourself, check out this link.

aj

p.s. Many thanks to Andrew Burke for alerting me (and others) to this gem.

[reconditioned hippy school buses; trans-Canadian odysseys; Dorchester Boulevard; rue Ste-Catherine]