profile

    Jean-Claude Labrecque

    1938-06-19 (85 years old) in Québec City, Québec, Canada

    Jean-Claude Labrecque, CM CQ (June 19, 1938 – May 31, 2019) was a director and cinematographer who learned the basics of filmmaking at the National Film Board of Canada. Jean-Claude Labrecque was born in Quebec City, Quebec, and trained as a camera assistant at the NFB. As a cinematographer, he shot many of the early key films of Claude Jutra (À tout prendre), Michel Brault (Entre la mer et l’eau douce), Gilles Carle (La vie heureuse de Léopold Z), Gilles Groulx (Le Chat dans le sac) and Don Owen (Notes for a Film About Donna and Gail, The Ernie Game). He turned to directing in 1965 with 60 Cycles, about a long-distance bike race on the North Shore of the St. Lawrence River, which has been described as a virtual encyclopedia of camera techniques. It won 22 international awards and was nominated for a BAFTA. He left the NFB in 1967 to set-up his own production company, although he continued to freelance with the Board.

    Movies

    poster
    Labrecque, une caméra pour la mémoire
    90 %|Oct 29, 2017
    Documentary
    poster
    Remembering Maria Chapdelaine
    80 %|Feb 21, 2015
    Documentary
    poster
    Live Before the Letter
    0 %|Jan 1, 2006
    Documentary
    actor
    Le chemin du Roy
    0 %|Nov 21, 1997
    Documentary

    Series

    poster
    Doc humanité
    0 %|Oct 13, 2018
    Documentary