Times Colonist

Quebec director remembered as ‘true artist and loving guy’

Filmmaker acclaimed for naturalist­ic approach died of a heart attack over the weekend

- MELISSA COUTO ZUBER

Jean-Marc Vallée was nearly ready to give up filmmaking before a 2005 project turned the tides on his career, a colleague recalled days after the Québécois director and producer died.

Vallée, who went on to direct a string of high-profile films and series after his breakout C.R.A.Z.Y. — winning an Emmy for the hit HBO series Big Little Lies and multiple nomination­s for the 2013 drama Dallas Buyers Club — died of a heart attack in his cabin outside Quebec City over the weekend, his representa­tive Bumble Ward said Monday. He was 58.

Canadian producer Pierre Even, who worked with Vallée on a pair of projects including C.R.A.Z.Y., said the “difficult shoot” of the 2005 film had the filmmaker wondering if he’d ever make another movie.

“We didn’t have enough money, we were struggling to do everything we needed to do and Jean-Marc was saying: ‘Pierre, you don’t understand, this is going to be my last film,” Even said Monday in a phone interview from Montreal.

“And I was telling him: ‘I don’t know if C.R.A.Z.Y. is going to be good or not … but I’m sure of one thing — you’re going to make other films.”

Vallée wrote, directed and co-produced the coming-of-age Quebec drama about a young gay man dealing with homophobia in the 1960s and ’70s.

The movie, which earned $6 million in box office revenue in Quebec alone, was Vallée’s first feature film to be both written and directed by him.

Even said Vallée, who had dreamed of creating the project for years, put “tremendous” pressure on himself to make it work. When they saw the reception of the film’s première in Montreal, Even said they knew they had made “something special.”

“It was always a film about somebody that feels different and wants to fit in, and that’s a universal theme. But we were surprised how much the audience took the film and [it] became their story,” Even said.

“During the première … we had people coming out of the theatre in tears saying ‘T hat’s my life.’ ”

Even said Vallée was already a successful director in Canadian film circles, but C.R.A.Z.Y. made him a global name as it screened at other festivals.

He said agents in Los Angeles were soon calling Vallée, wanting to meet him and discuss potential projects.

“I think it made people realize not only was he a good director but he could tell a story that people would want to see and that would catch audiences all over the world,” Even said.

Vallée, acclaimed for his naturalist­ic approach to filmmaking, directed stars including Reese Witherspoo­n, Nicole Kidman, Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal over the past decade.

He directed Emily Blunt in 2009’s The Young Victoria and became an even more soughtafte­r name in Hollywood after Dallas Buyers Club, featuring Matthew McConaughe­y and Jared Leto, earned six Academy Awards nomination­s, including best picture.

Producing partner Nathan Ross said in a statement that Vallée “stood for creativity, authentici­ty and trying things differentl­y.”

“He was a true artist and a generous, loving guy. Everyone who worked with him couldn’t help but see the talent and vision he possessed,” the statement said. “He was a friend, creative partner and an older brother to me.

“The maestro will sorely be missed but it comforts knowing his beautiful style and impactful work he shared with the world will live on.”

Vallée was born in Montreal and studied filmmaking at the Collège Ahuntsic and the Université du Québec à Montréal.

Vallée received the Directors Guild of America Award and the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Directing in 2017 for the HBO Limited Series Big Little Lies, which he also executive produced. The series won eight Emmys and four Golden Globes in total.

He also directed and executive produced the HBO limited series Sharp Objects which was nominated for eight Emmys.

HBO called Vallée a “brilliant, fiercely dedicated filmmaker,” in a statement.

“A truly phenomenal talent who infused every scene with a deeply visceral, emotional truth,” the statement said. “He was also a hugely caring man who invested his whole self alongside every actor he directed.”

Even said Vallée demanded much from those who worked with him, but he was also very loyal, often bringing in Québécois crews to work on other projects. He also edited many of his projects back home in Montreal, building a state-of-the-art editing suite in his home.

“He was so passionate,” Even said, adding that Vallée’s crews needed to work hard to achieve his vision. “But even if he’s asking for the moon, let’s get him the moon because we know it’s going to be great.”

Cameron Bailey, CEO of the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, referred to Vallée as a “prodigious talent” on Twitter, adding that Vallée is the only filmmaker to both open TIFF, with Demolition in 2015, and close the festival, with The Young Victoria in 2009.

“I’ll miss his fire,” Bailey said in the tweet.

Celebritie­s also took to social media to honour Vallée on Monday.

Canadian actor Jay Baruchel said on Twitter that Vallée was “a profoundly gifted artist whose passions and efforts have advanced the medium of cinema.”

Witherspoo­n posted a photo of herself and Vallée on her Instagram account with the caption: “My heart is broken. My friend. I love you.”

Among the first to respond to the news was Shailene Woodley, who shared a photo of Vallée on her Instagram story late Sunday night in a state of “complete and utter shock.”

“God, death is the worst,” she wrote.

“But I guess somehow I know you will turn it into a grand adventure … one for the books, one I cant wait to read & to watch when my time comes. It doesn’t make sense though dude. It doesn’t make sense.”

In Big Little Lies, Woodley played young single mom Jane Chapman opposite Witherspoo­n’s alpha mom Madeline Martha Mackenzie.

“Maybe when we wake up tomorrow you’ll be there laughing saying it was just a satirical short film you made,” Woodley continued. “That it’s not real.”

Vallée is survived by his sons, Alex and Émile, and siblings Marie-Josée Vallée, Stéphane Tousignant and Gérald Vallée.

Even said Vallée’s impact on Canadian cinema will continue to be felt for years.

“Jean-Marc had such a personal way of filming that it’s not something you can copy,” he said. “There’s only one Jean-Marc Vallée and when you watch Big Little Lies or Sharp Objects or C.R.A.Z.Y. or Café de Flore or Wild, you’re going to see it’s a Jean-Marc Vallée movie.

“And that quality of filmmaking … it’s so rare and so precious.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jean Marc Vallée arrives for the screening of The Rest of Us at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in Toronto on Sept. 6, 2019. Vallée, who won an Emmy for directing the hit HBO series Big Little Lies and whose 2013 drama Dallas Buyers Club earned multiple Oscar nomination­s, has died at age 58.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Jean Marc Vallée arrives for the screening of The Rest of Us at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in Toronto on Sept. 6, 2019. Vallée, who won an Emmy for directing the hit HBO series Big Little Lies and whose 2013 drama Dallas Buyers Club earned multiple Oscar nomination­s, has died at age 58.
 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Director Jean-Marc Vallée, left, accepts the Hollywood Breakthrou­gh Director Award for Wild from Reese Witherspoo­n during the Hollywood Film Awards at The Palladium on Nov. 14, 2014, in Hollywood, California.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Director Jean-Marc Vallée, left, accepts the Hollywood Breakthrou­gh Director Award for Wild from Reese Witherspoo­n during the Hollywood Film Awards at The Palladium on Nov. 14, 2014, in Hollywood, California.

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