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Since its creation in 1971, InformAction has gained
international recognition for the quality of its audiovisual productions.
Today the company is still controlled by its three founders, producer
Nathalie Barton, director Jean-Claude Bürger and director Alain
d'Aix, who under his real name, Gérard Le Chêne, also
heads Vues d’Afrique, the Montreal-based festival of African
images.
“InformAction started out to raise
awareness about international situations and cultures that
had generally escaped media attention. Today, while we have
gained a little wisdom and experience over the years, we
believe our films still retain the innovative approach of
our earlier works, with a preference for the politically
incorrect, a penchant for innovative ideas and unusual characters,
while offering a window on the world and all it has to offer.”
Nathalie
Barton, Alain d'Aix, Jean-Claude Bürger
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Our Early
Films
InformAction’s very first documentaries were
produced with the support of the Office du film du Québec,
headed by Raymond-Marie Léger. In our first films, we wanted
to expose the issues behind certain international conflicts that
were ignored by the mainstream media, and to take a stand on human
rights violations in countries which never made the headlines, especially
developing nations. Our first documentary, Anyanya, focused on a
forgotten war in southern Sudan which broke out in 1956 and is still
unresolved today. In the company of Sudanese rebel forces, our crew
followed the radio coverage of Idi Amin’s takeover of neighbouring
Uganda.
While on this shoot in Africa in 1971, our crew also produced
the short documentaries Tam-tam et balafons about Cameroon during
the era of Cardinal Léger, and Yvongélisation, dealing
with Canada’s development efforts in Africa, as seen through
the eyes of Quebec humorist Yvon Deschamps.
During the production of Contre-censure (1976), crew members changed
their names in order to avoid future problems obtaining travel
visas. Nathalie Barton assumed the alias Morgane Laliberté,
while Gérard Le Chêne became Alain d'Aix, a nom de
plume which has stuck with him for all his subsequent films. Contre-censure explores the darker side of the Cameroon war of independence and
reveals why the book “Main basse sur le Cameroun” (Free
for All in Cameroon) by the great writer Mongo Béti was
banned in his own country, confiscated from bookstores in France,
then re-published in Québec by Léandre Bergeron.
The film won an award at the Grenoble Film Festival.
During this difficult neo-colonial period, another book was also
banned in France: “Prison d’Afrique” (African
Prison), which exposed the brutal repression in Guinea Conakry
under the dictatorship of Sekou Touré, until then considered
a courageous third world militant. This situation provided the
premise for the documentary La danse avec l’aveugle (If You
Dance with a Blind Man) (1978). Jean-Paul Alata, author of the
banned book, appeared in the film, and was subsequently assassinated.
The film circulated clandestinely in Guinea and went on to win
several international awards.
Another film that took a stand against censorship was Alain d’Aix’s Le
dur désir de dire (1981). It paints the portrait of René Vautier,
a filmmaker from Brittany (France) who produced the very first
anti-colonial film, Afrique 50. This film actually triggered a
series of 1970s hunger strikes to protest censorship of Vautier’s
feature-length films in France.
The Mercenary Game (1983) took our crew from the US to the Caribbean
and from Europe to Africa, on the trail of troubled individuals
who act out their fantasies as mercenary heroes in the third world
and are manipulated by underhanded superpowers. This film marks
the start of a long-lasting collaboration between InformAction
and cinematographer Philippe Lavalette. On that shoot in Madagascar,
Jean-Claude Bürger also directed a gripping portrait of Quebec’s
former Minister Jacques Couture, who had returned to his initial
humble vocation of priest. Bürger also directed L'âge
de guerre (1977), a short film which uses the medium of children’s
drawing to expose the ruthlessness of the war between Bangladesh
and Pakistan.
Turbulence Ahead (1984) pursued the search for geopolitical truth
along the oil trail in Southern Africa. The film was broadcast
on Radio-Québec, as were Le dur désir de dire and
The Mercenary Game. During the 80s, the series Transmission
d'expériences
créoles (Creole Experiences) revealed the existence of a
cultural entity stretching from the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean,
composed of 12 million individuals who were then just beginning
to get to know each other. The documentary White Justice (1985),
co-directed by Françoise Wera and Morgane Laliberté,
examined the cultural stakes at play for the Inuit of the Quebec
Arctic (broadcast by Radio-Canada).
Recent productions
In the early 90s, two “documentary comedies” featuring
Denis Bouchard - The Singles Games (by Louis Fraser and Alain d'Aix),
and Tristan and Juliette or Love in the Year 2000 (Isabelle Turcotte
and Alain d'Aix) - marked the start of a new era characterized
by fresh, innovative subject matter and a renewed exploration of
form.
InformAction remained true to its love of Africa with a three-part
series on African cinema co-produced with Burkina Faso and the
Ivory Coast for broadcast on TV5, and created in collaboration
with Ariane Émond, Ousseynou Diop, Yves Langlois and Maka
Kotto. In 1995, the Rwandan tragedy triggered the series Rwanda
: Like Sun in the Night which comprises inspiring testimony from
30 survivors of the genocide. This was followed by the documentary
Les Racines de l’espoir (The Roots of Hope), directed by
Marc Renaud in collaboration with Gil Courtemanche.
In the 1990s, Nathalie Barton also began producing point-of-view
documentaries by a number of talented filmmakers and established
InformAction’s reputation a strong promoter of auteur documentaries.
InformAction also became involved in the production of several
first works, with the support of SODEC’s Jeunes Créateurs
program. Click here for a complete list of InformAction productions.
Today, InformAction continues to produce high quality documentaries
for the Canadian and international markets, and is engaged in an
increasing number of high-end international co-productions. Through
Nathalie Barton’s involvement with the Association des producteurs
de films et de télévision du Québec (APFTQ),
InformAction also actively participates in the lobby to pressure
broadcasters and funding organizations to provide a rightful place
for the creative documentary genre. |