Gamma rays, by Henry Bernadet | Young people on the loose

Fifteen years later West of Plutoan choral film made with Myriam Verreault featuring young people from a suburb of Quebec, Henry Bernadet casts his gaze on adolescents from the Saint-Michel district, in Montreal, in Gamma rays.




Born in a white suburb of Quebec, like the one we saw in West of Pluto (2008), Henry Bernadet settled in Montreal in 2014, in the borough of Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension, near a creamery in the shape of a pink and blue castle. The same one where one of the characters of his first solo fiction feature film works, Gamma rayswhich features young people from cultural diversity.

“It’s the same asWest of Pluto, but it’s completely the opposite! », says the director, met in Montreal after his visit to the Abitibi-Témiscamingue International Cinema Festival. “We presented the film in Rouyn, in front of an audience of all ages. There was a standing ovation. People needed this film, I swear! Spectators went to see the young people after the screening, it was magical! »

Choral film taking place over the course of a summer, Gamma rays is based on three stories, developed with the collaboration of Nicolas Krief and Isabelle Brouillette. First there is that of Abdel (Yassine Jabrane), who has difficulty accepting the presence of his cousin Omar (Hani Laroum), whom his parents are hosting during his vacation. Then that of Fatima (Chaimaa Zinedine) and Naïma (Océane Garçon-Gravel), whose friendship will be put to the test due to the former’s bad company. And finally, that of Toussaint (Chris Kanyembuga), who finds a bottle containing a telephone number while going fishing.


PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

Director Henry Bernadet

I didn’t want to make a pamphlet against racism at all, but the reality of these young people led me to put scenes in the film where characters are victims of it. At some point, you can’t pretend it doesn’t exist.

Director Henry Bernadet

“My dream would be that people who talk nonsense about them would see the film. They would see how friendly, funny, interesting, fascinating these young people are, and I think that transcends their identity. Yes, they have a different culture, but we are like them. The goal was to simply meet them. »

Opening on the world

After a few years living in a multicultural neighborhood of Montreal, Henry Bernadet wanted to include the people he met there in a film project. In the company of playwright Emmanuelle Jimenez, he explored his neighborhood in search of people and stories. For three years, he met young people from the Georges-Vanier school and gave on-camera acting workshops. He also distributed questionnaires to other young people at the school in order to get to know them better.

“It was so stimulating that I no longer had the choice to make a film. There was so much material that at first, I was thinking of doing a fresco on the neighborhood, which I did, but not necessarily with young people. Then, when I went to Georges-Vanier, I met young, fun-loving people with whom I really developed a bond… even though they looked up to me and there was a gap cultural. It was a bit like with the young people ofWest of Pluto, strangely. »


PHOTO PROVIDED BY OPALE FILMS

Gamma rays notably features young people recruited from schools through workshops and auditions.

In addition to the students in the theater class, we find in Gamma rays young people recruited from other schools through workshops and auditions.

All the young people who play in the film told me that they didn’t see themselves in our cinema or our TV. One of their goals was to see each other, particularly for Chaimaa, who wanted to show her world, her community.

Director Henry Bernadet

“I wanted to see them too. They were really ready to embark on this adventure and they are proud to have done it. The film is a tribute, a poem, a love letter to a neighborhood that I loved,” continues the director.

During filming, Henry Bernadet took the liberty of adding a documentary aspect to certain scenes, such as the one where a young Russian reveals his future plans to Toussaint. To better explore the neighborhood settings, he also included shots of a boy doing parkour and another practicing mixed martial arts.

“When we see young people of diversity in the media, it is because they are sources of problems or victims, it is to talk about poverty, problems linked to immigration or the gang phenomenon, that we touches on a little in the film. Those I have met are serene and experiencing lots of things. Adolescence is an intense period full of paradoxes; each character in the film meets someone and reaches out to others. I wanted to show that there was no way out of remaining withdrawn into oneself on many levels, as an individual, but also as a society. »

The film Gamma rays is presented at the Impérial cinema on November 8, at 6 p.m., as part of the Cinemania French-speaking film festival

In theaters November 10


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