Louis 19, King of the Airwaves (French: Louis 19, le roi des ondes) is a Canadian comedy film, released in April 1994.[2]

Quick Facts French, Directed by ...
Louis 19, King of the Airwaves
FrenchLouis 19, le roi des ondes
Directed byMichel Poulette
Written by
  • Sylvie Bouchard
  • Émile Gaudreault
  • Michel Michaud
  • Michel Poulette
Produced by
  • Jacques Dorfmann
  • Pierre Laberge
Starring
CinematographyDaniel Jobin
Edited byDenis Papillon
Music byJean-Marie Benoît
Distributed byMalofilm
Release date
  • 1 April 1994 (1994-04-01)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageFrench
Box officeC$1.8 million (Canada)[1]
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The film stars Martin Drainville as Louis Jobin, a television fanatic who wins a contest to be on television. Unbeknownst to him, however, his prize is to become a reality show: he is followed around by a cameraman 24 hours a day for three months, and when his life doesn't make for compelling viewing, the show's producers decide to manipulate his life to make the show more exciting.[3]

The film was directed by Michel Poulette, and written by Poulette, Sylvie Bouchard, Michel Michaud and Émile Gaudreault. It won the Golden Reel Award as the year's top-grossing film in Canada.

Cast

  • Martin Drainville : Louis Jobin
  • Zenhu Han : Sam Ying
  • Chantal Fontaine : la reporter
  • Gilbert Lachance : Remi
  • Jean L'Italien : Roger
  • Dominique Michel : Aline Jobin
  • Alexandra Boulianne : une chanteuse de la chorale
  • Mireille Thibault : une chanteuse de la chorale
  • Sylvie Bouchard : une chanteuse de la chorale
  • Yves Jacques : Michel Gobeil
  • Carol Jones : une gardienne de sécurité
  • Patricia Tulasne : Charlotte Dubreuil
  • Marcela Seguel : Marie-Laurence Despins
  • Stephanie Laplante : scripte télé
  • Pierre Paquin : réalisateur télé
  • Guillaume Lemay-Thivierge : le technicien de la régie
  • Agathe de La Fontaine : Julie Leduc
  • Marie-Claude Robitaille: Guylaine
  • Sonia Laplante: Josée
  • Benoît Brière: Caméraman

Release

The film opened on 34 screens in Quebec on April 1, 1994.[4]

Reception

The film grossed $194,732 in its opening weekend[4] It went on to win the Golden Reel Award for the year's top-grossing film in Canada,[5] even though it was only released in Quebec, with a gross of C$1.8 million.[1]

Awards

The film won the Claude Jutra Award for the best feature film by a first-time Canadian film director.[6] It was also a nominee for Best Motion Picture,[7] but lost to Exotica.

Remake

The 1999 American film EDtv was an adaptation of Louis 19.[8]

References

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