Hochelaga, Land of Souls

Hochelaga, Land of Souls

2017 ""
Hochelaga, Land of Souls
Hochelaga, Land of Souls

Hochelaga, Land of Souls

6.5 | 1h40m | en | Adventure

Mohawk archaeologist Baptiste Asigny engages in a search for his ancestors following a tragic terrain slump in the Percival Molson Stadium.

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6.5 | 1h40m | en | More Info
Released: September. 09,2017 | Released Producted By: Max Films , Country: Canada Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
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Mohawk archaeologist Baptiste Asigny engages in a search for his ancestors following a tragic terrain slump in the Percival Molson Stadium.

Genre

Adventure , Drama , History

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Hochelaga, Land of Souls (2017) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Samian , Raoul Max Trujillo , Vincent Perez , Siân Phillips , Sébastien Ricard , Emmanuel Schwartz

Director

François Séguin

Producted By

Max Films

Hochelaga, Land of Souls Videos and Images

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  • Top Credited Cast
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  • Crew
François Séguin
François Séguin

Production Design

Nicolas Bolduc
Nicolas Bolduc

Director of Photography

Mario Davignon
Mario Davignon

Costume Design

Nadège Bozzetti
Nadège Bozzetti

CG Supervisor

François Girard
François Girard

Director

Pascal Elissalde
Pascal Elissalde

First Assistant Director

Gaétan Huot
Gaétan Huot

Editor

Sylvie Lacoste
Sylvie Lacoste

Associate Producer

Heidi Levitt
Heidi Levitt

Casting

Patrick Roy
Patrick Roy

Executive Producer

Claude Paiement
Claude Paiement

Line Producer

Roger Frappier
Roger Frappier

Producer

Mario Nadeau
Mario Nadeau

Production Director

Gyan Riley
Gyan Riley

Original Music Composer

Terry Riley
Terry Riley

Original Music Composer

Francis Bernard
Francis Bernard

CG Artist

Hochelaga, Land of Souls Audience Reviews

Smartorhypo Highly Overrated But Still Good
Spoonixel Amateur movie with Big budget
Janae Milner Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.
Freeman This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
PatParnell This is just a miss as I'm concerned. The premise to begin the whole enterprise is just a joke. The main actor (Samian) is just boring and without any kind of deepness in his role (he's a singer, but he's clearly not an actor).The movie is slow and full of dull poetic tries that go nowhere (they try to fill the emptiness of the script), links that have no value and the assemblage is just not working as a valid work. I've tried to like some historical or artistic points in that movie, but I can't. It felt amateur and childish. It's a movie in the "air du temps" which means it is told in a weird asynchronous way just because if not, it would be even worst (like 2/10), it's filled with empty emotions, boring images and both the historical and reflexive aspects are quite low. Those people tried to make a historical non-historical semi-fiction about indigenous culture linked with a part of his progression, but it's a fail, a total fail. If you want to lean something about indigenous culture (or Quebec Culture as a whole), take a book on the subject or watch another movie. This one, even for entertainment, will make you lose your time.
jcmbaril In this movie's script, the Montreal writer's wish to connect with his city's history takes us on a first trip back in time to the 1200s; then the 1500s; the 1800s. With each return to the present, we rejoin the Mohawk archaeologist and follow along in his quest to find physical evidence for the exact location, on the Island of Montreal, for the village called "Hochelaga". In recorded history, we can read the words of Jacques Cartier, who describes his arrival in the village and his meeting with the Elders. Each voyage back in time means entering drastically different moments in the history of the City of Montreal: in the 12002, Iroquoian is spoken; in the 1500s, French, Latin & Mohawk are spoken; in the 1800s, French, English & Mohawk are spoken; in present day, Mohawk, French & English are spoken. Of course, sub-titles help us along in the separating out, and weaving back together of events over an eight-century span of time, and the Mohawk archaeologist's need to reach back and make real his ancestors.The year 2017 marked the 150th anniversary of the creation of (on July 1st 1867) of "The Dominion of Canada". Among others, one aboriginal filmmaker, Alethea Arnaquq-Baril (Angry Inuk / 2016), who is Inuit from Nunavut in northern Canada, called for Canadians to see why she would add two zeros to 150 years. In the months leading up to the July 1st celebration, the Inuit, Innu, First Nations and Métis peoples expressed how overlooked they felt, saying that the July 1st date, significant to European settlers, ignores the virtual wiping out of a multitude of peoples living here for centuries before the arrival of Jacques Cartier.Today, I entered the packed 350-seat theater, where most in attendance were over the age of 35. I could have heard a pin drop during the movie. As it concluded, a single person way down in front began to clap. A moment later others joined in. About 70% of those in attendance began to clap as well. I sat, quiet, just taking it all in. "It" being a collective experience, a collective moment, a collective happening. As I slowly walked back to my car, I thought: _ for all the talk we heard, back in July 2017, from those who say that Canada was born in 1867, what I experienced in a movie theater today tells me, that collectively, we all know otherwise.