THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING

78 min, Documentary, Quebec, Canada, 2009
Directed byCéline Baril
Produced byLes Films de l’autre
LanguageFrench
Short description

The Theory of Everything navigates its way between people and landscapes, between discourse and territory.

Film subjects Environment , Rural Life
Regis du cinemas, general

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Film details

Synopsis

The Theory of Everything navigates its way between people and landscapes, between discourse and territory.  Evocative landscapes whose silent presence speaks volumes.  People who, asked to talk about themselves, about their connection to the world, discuss the land and the subsoil, the forests and the rivers, everything that shapes them.  The people we meet are not experts. In their own way, they rethink the world, not as ours to exploit, but as part of ourselves.

 

Credits

Script and Direction : Céline Baril
Direction of Photography : Julien Fontaine

Sound : Julien Fontaine, Céline Baril

Editing : Natalie Lamoureux

Sound Editing : Patrice Leblanc

Music : Normand Guilbault,  Geneviève et Mathieu, Benoît Murray, Samuel-Josué Papillon

Producer : Céline Baril

Production : Les Films de l’autre

 

Financial Partners

Conseil des arts du Canada

Conseil des Arts et des lettres du Québec

ONF

Direction

Céline Baril

Céline Baril is a Fine Arts graduate of the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). She has several major solo exhibitions to her credit. Her work, which mainly combined sculpture, photography and video, naturally led her to filmmaking. In 1989, she produced and directed her first experimental film, Barcelone, a sensitive exploration of landscapes, both visual and sonic, and the people who inhabit them. The Ant and the Volcano (1992) is a fiction film shot in black and white featuring an all-Chinese cast of non-professional actors. Baril drew great inspiration from them and their stories to make this film, voiced-over in Cantonese. A finalist for the Rendez-vous du Cinéma Québécois’s André Leroux award, the film won the Quebec-Alberta prize. Then followed The Absent One (1997), a film based on one family’s photo albums found in a Paris flea market. Narrative played a prominent role in this first feature film, paving the way for her first fiction film, Games of the Heart (2001). Between 2001 and 2003, the filmmaker directed a few short-fiction films, including Giselle (2003) and Le décompte (2001), whose script was co-written by a dozen students from the École d’Éducation Internationale. Baril prolonged the experience by spending a year in a high school in an underprivileged area of Montreal, returning with Life Times 538 (2005), a first full-length, exceedingly timely documentary produced by the National Film Board. Over the course of an entire year, she singlehandedly filmed and recorded a handful of individuals, discretely bearing witness to daily life at the school. Over the course of 90 minutes, Baril paints an original portrait of the school and introduces us to the people behind the anonymous mass of so-called “problem” students. Then came The Theory of Everything, a feature documentary completed in April 2009.   Filmography   24 Davids (2017 / 132 min) Room Tone (2014 / 45 min) LA Théorie du tout (The Theory of Everything) (2009 / 79 min) 538 Fois la vie (538 time life) (2005 / 92 min) Giselle (2003 / 15 min) Du pic au cœur (Games of The Heart) (2001 / 85 min) L'Absent (The Absent One) (1997 / 78 min) La Fourmi et le volcan (The Ant and The Volcano) (1992 / 52 min) Barcelone (1989 / 40 min)