Canadian film director and screenwriter
Sophie Dupuis is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from Val-d'Or , Quebec , who studied at Concordia University and the Université du Québec à Montréal whose feature film debut Family First (Chien de garde) premiered in 2018 and was selected as Canada's submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards .[ 1] [ 2] The film was nominated for eight Prix Iris at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards , including a Best Director nomination for Dupuis.[ 3]
Prior to Family First , Dupuis directed the short films J'viendrais t'chercher , Si tu savais Rosalie , Félix et Malou , Faillir , and L'hiver et la violence .
Her second feature film, Underground (Souterrain) , was released in 2020.[ 4]
Her third feature film, Solo , premiered at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival ,[ 5] where it won the award for Best Canadian Film .[ 6]
Personal life
Following the release of Solo , Dupuis came out as queer in an essay for CBC Arts .[ 7]
References
^ Lévesque, François (2018-03-03). "La quête viscérale de Sophie Dupuis" . Le Devoir (in French). Retrieved 2024-08-27 .
^ Vlessing, Etan (19 September 2018). "Oscars: Canada Selects 'Watch Dog' for Foreign-Language Category" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 19 September 2018 .
^ Canadienne, La Presse (2018-04-10). "«Hochelaga» et «Le problème d'infiltration» dominent les nominations aux prix Iris" . Le Soleil (in French). Retrieved 2024-08-27 .
^ "Souterrain, de Sophie Dupuis : l’esprit de famille quand tout le reste s’écroule" . Ici Radio-Canada , September 5, 2020.
^ Allan Hunter, "‘Solo’: Toronto Review" . Screen Daily , September 10, 2023.
^ Christian Zilko, "American Fiction’ Wins People’s Choice Award at 2023 TIFF (Complete Winners List)" . IndieWire , September 17, 2023.
^ "Sophie Dupuis wasn't ready to call herself queer — but making her film Solo changed everything" . CBC Arts , September 11, 2023.
External links
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