The cinema world pays tribute to Daniel Langlois

Many continued Monday to pay tribute to entrepreneur Daniel Langlois, who was found dead with his partner in Dominica on Friday. The couple owned an eco-friendly hotel on the Caribbean island located between Guadeloupe and Martinique.

The news, which was reported by the Dominican media Dominica News Onlinewas confirmed by the Daniel Langlois Foundation.

“Daniel Langlois and his partner Dominique Marchand died in tragic circumstances on 1er December 2023 on the island of Dominica, near their Coulibri Ridge resort,” we read at the end of the man’s biography updated Monday on the foundation’s website.

Multiple media outlets reported that two bodies, believed to be those of the couple, were found in a burned-out car after they were reported missing.

Born in Jonquière, Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean, in 1957, Daniel Langlois left his mark on the cultural industry. He founded the 3D animation and modeling software Softimage and was its president and CEO from 1986 to 1998. The company notably contributed to the creation of special effects in the films of the sagas Jurassic Park and The Lord rings.

Softimage was merged with Microsoft, then sold to Avid, before becoming part of Autodesk in 2008.

Mr. Langlois also founded the Excentris cinema complex in 1999, which was located in Montreal. In 2002, he inaugurated 357C, a private club which was located in a heritage building in Old Montreal.

The entrepreneur has also served as president of DigiScreen, Media Principia and Digimart, as well as chairman of the board of Pixman Corporation.

A “great innovator”

On social networks, the cinema community paid tribute to this “great innovator”, as highlighted by the National Film Board (NFB) of Canada on the X platform (formerly Twitter) on Monday.

Mr. Langlois worked at the NFB in the early 1980s, which he considered his second school. “His contributions to the film industry are invaluable,” said the federal agency.

“Mr. Langlois’ innovative spirit revolutionized the special effects industry and cinema. His legacy will forever mark the world of art and technology,” said Telefilm Canada, also on the X network.

Holder of a bachelor’s degree in design from the University of Quebec in Montreal (UQAM), the entrepreneur was involved in the creation of the first stereoscopic animation (in which we perceive relief) by computer in IMAX format, which was presented at Expo 86 in Vancouver.

He also participated in the production of Peltrie’s animated short iTony, broadcast in 1985, which was well received by critics.

The Cinémathèque québécoise was also saddened to lose one of its major patrons, who “had bequeathed it the rich collection of its foundation for art, science and technology — our most important acquisition of 2011”.

“Thanks to his immense generosity, our collections have been enhanced with more than 2,500 16mm films, master tapes and video copies of all formats; 6,800 books, monographs, essays and catalogs; some devices, artifacts; without forgetting important funds such as those of Steina and Woody Vasulka and the collection of Sonia Landy Sheridan,” listed the Cinémathèque on Facebook.

“We are losing an ally. The world loses a visionary,” the organization added.

Daniel Langlois’ contribution to the Festival du nouveau cinéma (FNC) was also highlighted by its general director, Nicolas Girard Deltruc.

“Without his contribution, our organization would not be what it has become today. His commitment, always selfless financially, played a major and first-rate role in the development of our cultural sector,” said Mr. Girard Deltruc on Facebook on Sunday.

He described the entrepreneur as “a man of integrity, generous, visionary and of great discretion”.

“The legacy he leaves us reflects his innovative spirit,” declared the Minister of Canadian Heritage, Pascale St-Onge, on X Sunday.

Many distinctions

The man behind the Daniel Langlois Foundation, created in 1997, opened the self-sufficient luxury hotel Coulibri Ridge, in Dominica, last year, on which he had been working for several years with his partner, Dominique Marchand.

Mr. Langlois has received numerous awards and distinctions throughout his career. He was named a Knight of the National Order of Quebec in 1999, and an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2000.

The businessman was also named Arts-Business Personality by the City of Montreal in 2002, and honored as a Great Montrealer by the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal in 2004. A sign of his important place in the public space, he was named Personality of the Year at the 1995 Excellence La Presse gala.

He received honorary doctorates from the University of Sherbrooke, McGill University, the John Molson School of Management of Concordia University, the Faculty of Arts of UQAM and the University of Ottawa.

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