Aurore (2005 film)
Aurore is a 2005 Quebec biographical drama movie that was directed by Luc Dionne and produced by Denise Robert and Daniel Louis. The movie is a remake of Jean-Yves Bigras's 1952 movie La petite Aurore: l'enfant martyre (Little Aurore: The Child Martyr).
Aurore | |
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Aurore movie poster | |
Directed by | Luc Dionne |
Produced by | Denise Robert Daniel Louis |
Written by | Luc Dionne |
Starring | Marianne Fortier Serge Postigo Remy Girard Stéphanie Lapointe Yves Jacques Helene Bourgeois Leclerc Michel Forget Sarah-Jeanne Labrosse |
Music by | Michel Cusson |
Cinematography | Louis de Ernsted |
Edited by | Isabelle Dedieu |
Distributed by | Alliance Atlantis Vivafilm |
Release date | July 8, 2005 (Quebec) |
Running time | 115 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | French |
Budget | $7 million CDN [1] |
Synopsis
Aurore Gagnon, born in 1909 to Marie-Anne Caron and Telesphore Gagnon, is the second child of the couple. During the first nine years of her life, Aurore enjoys a happy life.
Then, during the fall of 1917, Aurore's mother develops tuberculosis. She is brought to hospital for several months and doctors conclude she will never recover. Plans are made to give custody of Aurore and her sister Marie-Jeanne to Telesphore and his late wife's cousin, Marie-Anne Houde (often simply referred to as Telesphore's cousin in the movie), with whom he had fallen in love. During a visit to Marie-Anne Houde before she goes into hospital, Aurore's mother finds one of Marie-Anne's children locked inside a wooden structure. This alerts her that Marie-Anne might not treat her children well. At the same time, Aurore sees her father kissing Marie-Anne; the girl criticizes her father for not caring enough about his ill wife.
Aurore's mother dies in 1918, and Telesphore and Marie-Anne marry immediately after the funeral. This is the start of an unhappier, more difficult life for Aurore, as her stepmother and father begin at once to mistreat her. When two of Marie-Anne's children die, some villagers blame Houde for their deaths.
The situation soon becomes worse for Aurore. During Father Leduc's visit to her school, he asks her a question about religion and she tells him to lower his voice. Immediately, Telesphore and Marie-Anne are notified and the mistreatment becomes more and more brutal. Marie-Anne carries out most of the abuse by slapping Aurore, striking her feet with a 2x4 with nails, and burning her with a burning steel hook. Her father also abuses her by slapping her and striking her with an axe handle. She is also locked in an isolated room with little food. After the attack with the nails, Oreus, the peace judge of the town, forces her parents to send Aurore to hospital and suspects that she has been beaten. When Exilda Lemay (played by Francine Ruel), discovers Aurore with severe wounds all over her body, she immediately alerts Oreus about the situation. Oreus goes to Quebec to discuss the issue with a crown attorney such as Aurore no longer leaving the house for church or school, sleeping or hiding in her room fearful of being abused again.
When the peace judge and several others, including doctors, arrive at Aurore's home, it is too late: she collapsed on the stairs and was attacked again by Marie-Anne with a 2x4. Doctors are unable to save Aurore, who passes away from blood poisoning.
After Aurore's funeral, the couple is arrested for Aurore's death. Telesphore is sentenced to life in prison for manslaughter. His cousin and wife Marie-Anne is initially sentenced to death by hanging for second degree murder. She is then given a life sentence, but health issues force her to leave the jail, and she later dies from breast and brain cancer. Father Leduc, whom Oreus blames for his lack of action on the case, kills himself with explosives.
The film ends with an epilogue of her abusive parents and a picture of Aurore's grave.
Cast
Main cast
- Aurore Gagnon (10 years old) by Marianne Fortier
- Télesphore Gagnon by Serge Postigo
- Marie-Anne Houde by Hélène Bourgeois Leclerc
- Marie-Anne Caron by Stéphanie Lapointe
- Oreus Mailhot by Rémy Girard
- Bishop Leduc by Yves Jacques
- Marie-Jeanne Gagnon by Sarah-Jeanne Labrosse
Secondary Cast
- Aurore Gagnon (6 years old) by Alice Morel-Michaud
- Arzélie Caron by Monique Spaziani
- Nérée Caron by Michel Forget
- Exilda Lemay by Francine Ruel
- Adjutor Gagnon by Michel Barrette
- Alphonse Chandonnet by Gaston Lepage
- Arcadius Lemay by Luc Senay
Awards
The movie was nominated for seven awards, including five Genie Awards and two Jutra Awards, including Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Actress for Hélène Bourgeois Leclerc.[2]