NFB Profiles
Browse
Baylaucq Philippe
An independent director, Philippe Baylaucq has made a variety of documentaries, dramas and experimental works for film, TV and video. He studied fine arts and cinema at the prestigious Hornsey College and Saint Martins School of Arts in London, England. His works have won numerous awards in Canada and abroad: Lodela (1996) garnered 11 international distinctions and Mystère B. (1998) won a prize at FIFA. His documentaries Les couleurs du sang (2000) and Sables émouvants (Moving Sands, 2003) were selected at several festivals, while the musical tale Hugo et le dragon (Hugo and the Dragon, 2001) toured the world.
In 2007, he was director and coordinator of the feature film Un cri au bonheur (Happiness Bound), created by a filmmaker collective. The year 2008 saw him directing a scientific documentary, La dynamique du cerveau, and launching at the Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal Le magicien de Kaboul (A Dream for Kabul), a documentary feature shot in New York, Tokyo and Kabul. Baylaucq is currently editing the documentary Il était deux fois un jardin, on the Reford Gardens and their visionary creators.
He is extremely active in the film community and received the prix Lumières in 2001 in recognition of his work to advance the interests of film directors in Quebec during his term as President of the Quebec directors association (Association des réalisateurs et réalisatrices du Québec - ARRQ) from 1996 to 2000. He has been chairing the Montreal International Documentary Festival (Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal) since 2005. Philippe was appointed filmmaker-in-residence at the NFB's French Program in April, 2009, where he just completed his film Ora.
___
Photo: InformAction