Canadian cinematographer
Nicolas Bolduc (born 5 March 1973)[1] is a Canadian cinematographer from Montreal , Quebec .[2] He won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Cinematography two years in a row, in the 1st Canadian Screen Awards and 2nd Canadian Screen Awards , for War Witch (2012) and Enemy (2013).[3] [4] He also won the Jutra Award for War Witch ,[5] and was nominated the next year for Louis Cyr .[6] Bolduc was nominated for Best Cinematography at the Prix Iris in 2017 for Two Lovers and a Bear .[7]
With Hochelaga, Land of Souls (2017), he competed at Camerimage ,[8] and won Best Cinematography at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards .[9] He also won Best Cinematography at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards for Hochelaga, Land of Souls .[10]
He was one of four directors, alongside Fabrice Barrilliet, Julien Knafo and Marie-Hélène Panisset, of the 2009 collective film Blind Spot .[11]
Filmography
Film
Short film
Year
Title
Director
Notes
2001
Des enfants de trop...
Myreille Bédard
2004
Le bonheur est dans les prés mais parfois c'est au fond d'un océan de souffrance qu'on finit par le trouver
Marie-Hélène Panisset
2007
Et si... l'espace d'un instant
Fabrice Barrilliet
Une femme de bien bonne humeur
Marie-Hélène Panisset
Can You Wave Bye-Bye?
Sarah Galea-Davis
Victor Gazon
Patrick Gazé
2008
Next Floor
Denis Villeneuve
2009
King Chicken
Himself
Also credited as writer and co-producer
2012
Denis Marleau
Kim Nguyen
2018
Paseo
Matthew Hannam
Television
Documentary works
Film
Year
Title
Director
Notes
2016
What Lies Below
Emanuel Hoss-Desmarais
With Nicolas Fransolet and Emanuel Hoss-Desmarais
TV series
Awards and nominations
Canadian Screen Awards
Prix Iris
Year
Title
Category
Result
Ref.
2012
War Witch
Best Cinematography
Won
[5]
2013
Louis Cyr
Nominated
[6]
2016
Two Lovers and a Bear
Nominated
[7]
2017
Hochelaga, Land of Souls
Won
[10]
Camerimage
References
^ "Nicolas Bolduc" (in French). AlloCiné . Retrieved 5 June 2019 .
^ Wheeler, Brad (5 June 2015). "Aloft: Past meets present in director Claudia Llosa's beautifully grim world" . The Globe and Mail . Retrieved 3 February 2018 .
^ a b "War Witch wins at the first Canadian Screen Awards" . Tribute . March 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2018 .
^ a b Barnard, Linda (9 March 2014). "Enemy biggest movie winner at Canadian Screen Awards" . The Toronto Star . Retrieved 3 February 2018 .
^ a b Vlessing, Etan (19 March 2013). "Kim Nguyen's War Witch dominates Jutras in Quebec" . Playback . Retrieved 28 March 2017 .
^ a b "Domination musclée de Louis Cyr aux nominations des Jutra" . Le Devoir (in French). 28 January 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2020 .
^ a b Boutros, Magdaline (5 April 2017). "Gala Québec cinéma: Juste la fin du monde et Two Lovers and a Bear en tête" . La Presse (in French). Retrieved 1 May 2017 .
^ a b Caranicas, Peter (20 October 2017). "Camerimage Film Festival Includes 'Mother!,' 'Wonder Wheel' and 'Wonderstruck' in Main Competition" . Variety . Retrieved 3 February 2018 .
^ a b Ahearn, Victoria. " 'The Breadwinner' among early Canadian Screen Awards winners" . National Post . Retrieved 11 March 2018 .
^ a b Pradier, Samuel (29 May 2018). "Gala Artisans Québec Cinéma: cinq Iris pour 'Les affamés' " . Le Journal de Montreal (in French). Retrieved 31 May 2018 .
^ a b Normand Provencher, "Lucidité passagère: petites crises entre amis" . Le Soleil , March 20, 2010.
External links
International National Other