Liar, by Émile Gaudreault | A liar, a liar and a half

Following LiarÉmile Gaudreault’s big success in 2019 with more than 4 million revenues, Liar stars Anne-Élisabeth Bossé in the role of a woman who sees her lies come true, to the great dismay of her boyfriend, played by Antoine Bertrand. The Press met them on the penultimate day of filming.




In the last third of Liar, a fanciful comedy written with Éric K. Boulianne and Sébastien Ravary, Émile Gaudreault had sown the seeds for a possible sequel. “It was really an accident because we had another ending that we shot. During editing and public screening, we realized that it was a flash and that people were stopping, that they were angry at the end,” says the filmmaker we met in Longueuil on Thursday afternoon.

“I’m wary of flashes and as I wanted people to like my film, we removed it,” he continues. I had a lot of anxiety because I didn’t have an oumpf at the end. In a sleepless night, I remembered that we had a liar and monks at the beginning of the film. So we edited extracts that we hadn’t taken and brought Anne-Élisabeth back to shoot a new scene, which became the end. »

Blonde of Phil Aubert (Antoine Bertrand), twin brother of the compulsive liar Simon (Louis-José Houde), Virginie Gauthier (Anne-Élisabeth Bossé) admitted to having cheated on Phil with Sandra (Marie-Lise Pilote), to having lost then won their RRSP poker, being a poacher and having an Instagram account of dead rabbits. In short, beneath her wise exterior, Virginie hid a double life.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Director Émile Gaudreault during the filming of his film Liar

“The sequel was not planned, but it happened by chance,” explains Émile Gaudreault. If the film hadn’t been successful, we would have made do with the little wink at the end. With Érik and Sébastien, we quickly started writing the sequel. »

It was fun to have a female protagonist because it took us completely elsewhere. Virginie lies to make people happy, out of unhealthy self-sacrifice. It’s like a slightly more disjointed Amélie Poulain.

Émile Gaudreault, director

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

The actress Anne-Élisabeth Bossé

” In Liar, there was no real common thread in his lies, recalls Anne-Élisabeth Bossé. In Liar, we’re starting a little fresh, there are things that we’re putting aside. Ultimately, it is the feminine lie, although many men will recognize themselves in it. Virginie does not lie to exaggerate her prowess; she is truly humble. She can’t bear to say something that will make the other person uncomfortable, hurt them; she wants to reassure excessively and she seeks balance. She is the child of a divorced couple who suffers from eldest daughter syndrome. »


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