Elephant Song (film)

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Elephant Song
Elephant-Song-film-poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Charles Binamé
Produced by Richard Goudreau
Manon Lavoie (assistant prod.)
Written by Nicolas Billon
Starring
Music by Patrice Dubuc
Gaëtan Gravel
Cinematography Pierre Gill
Edited by Dominique Fortin
Release dates
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  • 6 September 2014 (2014-09-06) (TIFF)
Running time
110 minutes
Country Canada
Language English

Elephant Song is a 2014 Canadian drama film directed by Charles Binamé and adapted from the same titled stage play by Nicolas Billon.[1][2] The film premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.[2]

Plot

The film stars Bruce Greenwood as Toby Green, an independent psychiatrist who is gradually drawn into a psychological mind game by Michael (played by Xavier Dolan), whom he is interviewing about the disappearance of Green's colleague Dr. Lawrence (Colm Feore).[1] Michael, a disturbed young man, the son of an opera singer and a distant father he has only seen once has an aura of charm about himself and displays signs of rationality and intelligence that draws the doctor deeper into the plot despite warnings by nurse Susan Peterson (Catherine Keener) to keep a distance from the patient.

Toby Green is assigned to investigate Michael's involvement as Michael draws the doctor into his plot by convincing him not to read his files, but rather form his own opinion based on what Michael has to offer in explanations. Michael continues revealing his troubled experiences with parents. The elephant connection is from his sole meeting with his father in a nature reserve, when the father kills an elephant in front of his son. The incident traumatizes the very young Michael. So does his mother's cold attitude and her distancing herself from him for a singing career, with Michael claiming he "killed his mother" by refusing to call an ambulance for her and instead sang to her the "elephant song" until she died on the floor.

Michael discusses the circumstances of his forced stay in the hospital, he hints to doctor-patient improper relationships involving him and his supervising doctor, and bizarre love-hate relationship with the head nurse Susan Peterson. Michael's ploys also include an attempt to negotiate his early release from hospital, in return to divulging the circumstances of Dr. Lawrence's disappearance. With Dr. Lawrence surfacing alive after the note he left is delivered to Dr. Green, and how this final scheme ends in great tragedy when he finally convinces the investigating doctor to hand him the box of chocolates as reward. Being strongly allergic to them, he dies in the hands of the doctor and the head nurse after having consumed a number of the chocolates he acquired, with adrenaline shots and resuscitation attempts all failing to save Michael's life.

Cast

Awards and nominations

Wins
  • In 2015, Nicolas Billon won the Canadian Screen Award for "Best Adapted Screenplay"
Nominations
  • In 2014, Charles Binamé was nominated for "Best Canadian Feature Film" at the Vancouver International Film Festival
  • In 2014, he was also nominated for the Grand Prize at the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival
  • In 2014, Bruce Greenwood was nominated for "Best Supporting Actor in a Canadian Film" by the Vancouver Film Critics Circle
  • During the 2015 Canadian Screen Awards, Bruce Greenwood was nominated for "Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role"

References

External links


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