Plans for the weekend | Beautiful outings in anticipation of the summer holidays

Summer is at our doors. Here are some suggestions to keep you waiting.


Start of the Francofolies de Montréal

The kick off of the 34e edition of the Francofolies de Montréal will be given on June 9. Until June 17, the Quartier des Spectacles in downtown Montreal will vibrate to the sound of Francophone music. Festival-goers will not only be able to attend more than 100 free outdoor shows, but also about thirty indoor performances.

The magic of the Impressionists until June 30


PHOTO SUSAN MOSS, PROVIDED BY PRODUCTION TANDEM

The exhibition The magic of the Impressionists

Buoyed by its great success, the exhibition The magic of the Impressionists is back at the Studio-Cabaret of Espace St-Denis for new performances until June 30. Spectators will therefore have the chance to see (or see again) the world through the prism of a hundred Impressionist masterpieces – including The starry NightVan Gogh, or even Boaters’ lunch, by Renoir. The exhibition is also presented at Espace Quatre Cents, in the Old Port of Quebec, and will be shown in Toronto in July.

The exhibition Keep an eyea river and its pilots arrives in Montreal


PHOTO DOMINIC DELORME, PROVIDED BY THE ST. LAWRENCE CENTRAL PILOTS CORPORATION

Overview of the traveling exhibition Keep watch, a river and its pilots, during a stop at Cap-Santé

The traveling and free exhibition Watching the grain, a river and its pilots will be in Montreal from June 10 to 29, at Promenade-Bellerive park, in the Tétreaultville district. Designed to mark the 150e anniversary of the Corporation of Pilots of the Central St. Lawrence, the exhibition presents the history of piloting on the river and focuses on the profession of maritime pilot. It will then move from 1er July 20, at Fort-de-Pointe-Aux-Trembles Park, in Pointe-aux-Trembles, where two circus artists will maneuver an oversized device as part of the ecH2osystem maritime research-creation project, and will end their stopover in the metropolis at the Grand Quay of the Port of Montreal, from September 15 to October 16.

A family concert at Bourgie Hall


IMAGE PROVIDED BY THE MONTREAL CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

The actor Jean Marchand

The Montreal Chamber Music Festival (FMCM) invites families to a concert designed for children (and their parents), this Sunday, at 3:30 p.m., at Bourgie Hall. Actor Jean Marchand will guide young people through the fantastic world of the works on animal carnival And Pierre and the Wolf. Nearly twenty musicians will be on stage, including members of the Orchester symphonique de Montréal. Tickets are free for ages 16 and under.

Veronique Larocque, The Press

See and live the Zulu experience


PHOTO FROM THE SALA ROSSA WEBSITE

Rare African-American group to give in the extreme rock, Zulu speaks about the black reality in the United States with a knocking intensity.

Hardcore? power violence? Metal? A little of all that, and more. Rare African-American group to give in the extreme rock, Zulu speaks about the black reality in the United States with a knocking intensity. Radical speech, radical music. It’s aggressive. It’s dazzling. It breathes anger… But how to gently denounce centuries of racism, oppression and discrimination? Punk version of the Black Lives Matter movement, the group from Los Angeles (four men, one woman) is in Montreal to present its first “long-term” album, A New Tomorrow, as part of the Suoni del Popolo festival. Warning, explosive.

Jean-Christophe Laurence, The Press

June 9, 9 p.m., at the Sala Rossa

At the movie theater : Spider-Man – Across the Spider-Verse And The night of 12





In Spider-Man – Across the Spider-Versewe find Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) who, after destroying the paths to other dimensions in the first part Into the Spider-Verse, is obliged to plug the leaks. Thus enters The Spot (Jason Schwartzman) who holds Miles responsible for his fate. To help him, the Spider Society with Gwen (Hailee Steinfeld) Miguel O’Hara (Oscar Isaac) and Jessica Drew (Issa Rae) will come to the rescue of the 15-year-old teenager. ” How Across the Spider-Verse can it be better than the first part? To give a short and colorful answer, it’s as if screenwriters Phil Lord, Christopher Miller and Dave Callaham opened the door to the world they created for us after only allowing us to look out the window, “says the journalist. Pascal LeBlanc in his review published on June 2.





The night of 12 tells the story of a Grenoble police investigator haunted by the sordid murder of a young girl. The only certainty lies in the fact that the crime took place on the night of the 12th… “With constant rigor, Dominik Moll keeps his story under tension – although the outcome is known from the start – yet borrowing a very stripped down approach, devoid of any dramatic effect,” writes journalist Marc-André Lussier in his review published on June 2.


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