HAPPINESS IS A SAD SONG
A FILM BY FRANÇOIS DELISLE
Feature – Quebec – 2004 – 84 min
Color | French | 16:9 | 5.1
SYNOPSIS
Imagine it is summer and that, for the last several days, Montreal has been swimming in sweltering heat and smog. Then imagine that you are in the city’s downtown core and a woman holding a small video camera approaches you. She asks you to participate in a one-question survey. Although you are slightly wary of this proposal, you stop to listen. She asks you: “What does happiness mean to you?” and awaits your answer. Go on! What are you waiting for? Answer! Happiness is a Sad Song tells the disjointed story of Anne-Marie, an unemployed publicist pounding the pavement in Montreal with her mini-cam, collecting testimonials on the subject of happiness. It is happiness that she appears to seek, or understand to the point of being obsessed by her quest. Guided by serendipity and a series of surprising and varied encounters, Anne-Marie dives headfirst into her project. She meets a medley of characters whom she engages in engrossing, thought-provoking discussions about happiness. Anne-Marie moves from one character to the next, from one idea to the next in her survey, gathering reactions and challenging viewpoints that give her a chance to reflect upon her own life. How can her obsession be explained? Why the survey? And why the video camera?
CAST
Anne-Marie Cadieux, Boucar Diouf, Miro, Marie Brassard, Denis Trudel, Luc Proulx, Frédéric De Grandpré, Micheline Lanctôt
CREW
DIRECTOR : François Delisle
SCREENPLAY : François Delisle
PRODUCTION : François Delisle
CINEMATOGRAPHY : Edith Labbé
PRODUCTION DESIGN : Éric Bernard
SOUND DESIGN : Marcel Chouinard
EDITING : Pascale Paroissien
SCORE : Ève Cournoyer
BIOGRAPHY
Born in Montreal in 1967, François Delisle began his career by making short films between 1987 and 1991. His first feature, Ruth (1994), had critics raving and made a name for the director in Canada and Europe. In 2003, after founding his production company Films 53/12, he produced his second film, Happiness is a Sad Song (2004), which won several awards and brought him international acclaim. His next two films, You (2007) and Twice a Woman (2010), had a similar reception. The Meteor (2013) and Chorus (2015) screened at the Sundance and Berlin festivals. Both films were major international hits, screening at festivals and theaters in many countries around the world. In 2019 and 2020, Delisle directed Cash Nexus, his seventh feature, and then CHSLD, a documentary short about his mother in her twilight years. For over 30 years, François Delisle has been exploring the human condition through a personal, uncompromising cinema.
FILMOGRAPHY
WAITING FOR THE STORMS I 2025
CA$H NEXUS I 2019
CHORUS I 2015
THE METEOR I 2013
YOU I 2007
HAPPINESS IS A SAD SONG I 2004
RUTH I 1994