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  1. Claude Jutra’s Mon oncle Antoine (1971) is one of the most highly regarded Canadian films of all-time, a critical assessment which has not waned over the years since people have cared enough about Canadian film to think about canons. The film can be looked at, interpreted, and appreciated from a handful of perspectives –social/political, cultural, aesthetic/stylistic, historical– and normally requires that several of these perspectives be aligned to properly evaluate its contribution ...

  2. Nov 12, 1971 · 1 有用 东北洪常秀 看过 2018-03-14 14:08:51. 《安托万叔叔》被誉为加拿大最优秀的电影,电影中以少年的视角探索了爱情、生命与生活的意义。. 从懵懂困惑到厌恶,成人的世界总是残缺。. 在安东万叔叔醉酒后,向他表达自己的无助时,少年的一句“妈的”是他对 ...

  3. Maybe that’s because, in retrospect, Mon oncle Antoine could be seen to be telling on itself. Jacques Gagnon stars as a teenage boy in a depressed Quebec mining town circa the 1940s, grappling ...

  4. Nov 12, 1971 · Mon Oncle Antoine won eight Genie Awards (the Canadian Oscar) and was honored at seven international film festivals, but it wasn't until the film was broadcast on Canadian television that it was widely seen in its home country; since then, a poll of Canadian film writers named it the Best Canadian Film of all time in 1984, and similar polls in 1994 and 2004 found Mon Oncle Antoine still at the top of the list.

  5. Mon oncle Antoine (English Subtitled) - ONF. 1971 1 h 44 min. Claude Jutra's sweeping portrait of village life in 1940s Quebec has been called one of the greatest Canadian films of all time. Recalling a time when the local general store was the crossroads of life, the film illustrates the way a young boy sees the world and those closest to him ...

  6. Mon Oncle Antoine (1971) -- (Movie Clip) The Priest Is Waiting Young Benoit (Jacques Gagnon) is the acolyte guarding the door as his uncle Antoine (Jean Duceppe) and aide Fernand (director Claude Jutra) proceed with undertaking, in Mon Oncle Antoine, 1971.

  7. At Christmas time in the 1940s, a young teenager comes of age in a rural Quebec mining town during a strike. Regularly cited by critics and scholars as the greatest Canadian film of all time.