The Five of Us

The Five of Us (French: Elles étaient cinq) is a Québécois drama film, distributed by Remstar Distribution and Remstar Films. The film was directed and co-written by Ghyslaine Côté, and stars Jacinthe Laguë, Julie Deslauriers, Ingrid Falaise, Brigitte Lafleur, and Noémi Yelle. It premiered at the Montreal World Film Festival on August 26, 2004,[3] opened in theaters on August 27, 2004, and on DVD in February, 2005. The film follows four girls who strive to move on from the murder of their friend and the horrors of their past once they discover the man behind their trauma, Richard Thibodeau, is said to be granted conditional release from prison.

The Five of Us
Elles étaient cinq
Directed byGhyslaine Côté
Produced byMaxime Rémillard
Written byChantal Cadieux
Ghyslaine Côté
StarringJacinthe Laguë
Julie Deslauriers
Ingrid Falaise
Brigitte Lafleur
Noémi Yelle
Sylvain Carrier
Peter Miller
Music byNormand Corbeil
CinematographyAlexis Durand-Brault
Production
companies
  • Remstar Productions
  • Alliance Atlantis Vivafilm
  • Forum Films
Distributed byRemstar Distribution
Remstar Films
Release date
Running time
93 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageFrench
Budget$2.5 million[1]
Box office$1.85 million[2]

Plot

Manon (Jacinthe Laguë), Anne (Julie Deslauriers), Isa (Ingrid Falaise), Claudie (Brigitte Lafleur), and Sophie (Noemie Yelle) are all childhood friends. Ever since they were children, they would spend time at Sophie's cottage in Montreal. The five girls, now at the age of 17, return to the cottage as they have permission from their parents to spend the weekend on their own. The girls plan to host a party during the absence of their parents. Manon and Sophie depart to pick up groceries in preparation of the party. They do not have access to a car, so they decide to hitchhike with a stranger. Manon quickly develops a romantic interest for the stranger, while Sophie remains suspicious of his behavior. The party has begun, but Manon and Sophie have yet to return. The girls are having a blast, while Anne is worried about the safety of Manon and Sophie. Eventually, Isa takes a rowboat out with a boy in hopes to get some privacy. As the rowboat approaches land, Isa discovers Manon in the forest, stabbed and covered in blood. Sophie is missing. The boy brings Manon to safety, while Isa runs off to find Sophie.

15 years have passed since the incident. Manon is working as an administrator for a large firm. She expresses no interest in staff outings, nor does she express romantic interests towards men. She also avoids taking the elevator with any men, hence being uncomfortable in private places with them. Stéphane (Sylvain Carrier) enters the scene and invites Manon on a date, to which Manon accepts on the condition of being in a public space. Manon also refuses him from staying at her place for the night. Several days pass, and Manon begins to develop an intimate relationship with Stéphane.

Manon drives into a car wash, and recognizes the stranger that was responsible for her traumatic experience. She experiences an anxiety attack, rushes home, and locks her doors. Several flashbacks reveal that Sophie was chained to a tree and covered in blood. Manon collects and reviews the court files only to discover that the parole board granted the stranger, Richard Thibodeau (Peter Miller), conditional release. Manon then takes her medication to reduce her anxiety. Stéphane arrives unexpectedly, and discovers the court files which Manon was reviewing. He confesses his love for her, but she does not reciprocate.

Manon visits Sophie's parents to discuss the parole board's decision. Sophie's mother admits that she had pardoned Thibodeau because she was exhausted, and wanted to move forward. However, Sophie's father and Manon were in disagreement of her decision.

Manon returns home and invites Anne, who is now a mother, to her condo. Manon reveals that she had asked Sophie's parents for permission to return to the cottage, which was granted. She makes the decision to invite all of the girls on a trip to the cottage in hopes to leave her experience in the past and move on from her trauma. At this time, Isa is a model in New York, and Claudie is a chef in Montreal. All the girls agree to accompany Manon to the cottage in hopes to confront their past.

A flashback reveals that Sophie and Isa were best friends, and that Sophie was supposed to join Isa in New York. The girls arrive at the cottage, and explore the area in silence. Back in Montreal, Stéphane studies the case files in the library and uncovers Manon's past. A flashback confirms that Thibodeau had raped, beaten, and stabbed Manon.

After the girls have a heated discussion on Thibodeau's release, Manon spots Isa on a rowboat returning to the crime scene. It is revealed that Isa had found Sophie's lifeless body, stabbed and chained to a tree. Thibodeau had forced Manon to witness him stab and rape Sophie. Manon couldn't handle the trauma and attempted to escape, which resulted in Thibodeau murdering Sophie as a consequence for her actions. Manon faces her fear, and pursues Isa. Anne and Claudie follow along. Once they arrive at the scene, they remain relatively silent.

Another day passes by, and the girls become more comfortable and accepting of their experiences. Anne, Claudie, and Isa return to Montreal and witness the parole board's decision on Thibodeau's release upon parole. Manon leaves a tape for Thibodeau, expressing her thoughts and feelings towards him and her freedom of the trauma. Manon returns to Stéphane, and becomes more accepting towards her romantic and sexual relationship with him.

Cast

A shy, mature, and passionate administrator working with a large firm. Manon contends with her trauma from the event that took place when she was 17 years of age.

  • Julie Deslauriers as Anne:

An independent and a loving single mother of a young girl. As a result of the horrific experience from her youth, she is very protective of her child.

  • Ingrid Falaise as Isa:

A former model working in New York City. Isa is reluctant to commit to a romantic relationship, as she lost faith in men. This is due to a man being responsible for the murder of her best friend.

  • Brigitte Lafleur as Claudie:

A head chef in a Montreal restaurant. She is characterized as being humorous, promiscuous, and informal.

  • Noémi Yelle as Sophie:

A young conscientious girl, and a talented pianist. She is portrayed as being the most favorable and enthusiastic member of the group.

  • Sylvain Carrier as Stéphane:

A successful single father of a young girl. He is Manon's love interest in the film.

  • Peter Miller as Richard Thibodeau:

The stranger responsible for the girls' traumatic experiences. He was incarcerated for the rape and aggravated assault of Manon, and the murder of Sophie.

Release

The Five of Us premiered as the fest opener for the 2004 Montreal World Film Festival on August 26 in Montreal, Canada.[4] The film opened as part of the fest's World Competition alongside La Fiancée syrienne, Around the Bend, Le chef du stationnement, and hundreds of other films.[5]

Reception

Box office

The Five of Us grossed $1.85 million from the United States and Canada,[2] against a budget of $2.5 million.[1] It grossed just over $161,000 from 11 Québec theaters by the end of its first week of release, averaging $14,639 per theater.[6] It was also ranked as number two on the list of Canada's top five grossing films for its opening week.[6]

Accolades

At the 2004 Montreal World Film Festival, The Five of Us won the prize for best artistic contribution (Ghyslaine Côté) and the prize for most popular Canadian film (Ghyslaine Côté).[5] At the 2005 Jutra Awards, Brigitte Lafleur was tied for the best supporting actress award.[7]

gollark: I think because the main advantage was that it wouldn't produce neutrons in some sort of fusion reaction, and neutrons cause problems, except it still would because of the fuels each fusing with themselves.
gollark: I think I read somewhere that it wasn't very useful (he3) but i forgot why.
gollark: I too want vast swathes of land to be covered in generators which will not even work half the time because of "night" and "poor weather", which are hilariously energy-expensive to produce in the first place, and which will break after 40 years.
gollark: I mean, in a sense, maybe it is.
gollark: Also, anticentrism seems to imply you'd prefer, say, an extreme ideology in the opposite direction to yours over a generic middling centrist one, which is... odd?

References

  1. (2004) "Cinéma Québecois" Télé-Québec
  2. (2004) "Elles étaient cinq" Box Office Mojo
  3. (2004) "Elles etaient cinq opens World Film Fest, Zidi on jury" ProQuest
  4. (2004) "Fest opener Elles etaient cinq 'a story of hope'" ProQuest
  5. (2004) "PALMARÈS DU FESTIVAL DES FILMS DU MONDE DE MONTRÉAL - 2004" Palmarès du Festival des Films du Monde
  6. (2004) "Going the Distance breaks $1M" ProQuest
  7. "Les Prix Jutras / The Jutra Awards" Northern Stars
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.