Cruising Bar

Cruising Bar is a 1989 Canadian comedy film, directed by Robert Ménard. The film stars Michel Côté as four separate characters – Serge, a shy nerd; Patrice, a drug-addicted film and television stuntman; Jean-Jacques, a pompous yuppie; and Gérard, an unhappily married man – who are each out on Saturday night hoping to hook up with a woman.

Cruising Bar
Directed byRobert Ménard
Written byMichel Côté
Robert Ménard
Claire Wojas
StarringMichel Côté
Louise Marleau
Véronique Le Flaguais
CinematographyPierre Mignot
Edited byMichel Arcand
Music byRichard Grégoire
Distributed byMalofilm
Release date
1989
Running time
96 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageFrench
Box officeC$3.36 million (Canada)

The film's cast also includes Louise Marleau, Geneviève Rioux, Véronique Le Flaguais, Pauline Lapointe, Marthe Turgeon, Linda Sorgini and Tony Nardi.

The film was highly successful in Quebec, setting the province's then-record gross box office for its first week in theatres, and later reaching the highest box office ever received in the province by a homegrown film with a gross of C$3.36 million in Canada. It was not Quebec's most successful film of the year overall; although its box office in Quebec exceeded that of Denys Arcand's Jesus of Montreal, the Arcand film was more successful in English Canada and internationally.

The film received three Genie Award nominations at the 11th Genie Awards in 1990: Best Actor (Côté), Best Cinematography (Pierre Mignot) and Best Costume Design (Louise Labrecque). It did not win any of those awards, but Jacques Lafleur and Pierre Saindon were presented with a Special Achievement Genie for Make-Up.

A sequel film, Cruising Bar 2, was released in 2008.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.