John L'Ecuyer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John L'Ecuyer (born November 15, 1966, in Montreal) is a Canadian film and television director. He is the younger brother of Gerald L'Ecuyer, a noted Canadian film and television director. L'Ecuyer studied at Ryerson University in Toronto, where his classmates included screenwriter Brad Abraham.
His first feature, Curtis's Charm (1995), was an adaptation of a Jim Carroll story. The film received a special jury citation as Best Canadian Feature Film at the 1995 Toronto International Film Festival. L'Ecuyer's short film Use Once and Destroy (1995) also received a special jury citation at the festival, as Best Canadian Short Film.
L'Ecuyer's other feature film credits include Saint Jude (2000), and Le goût des jeunes filles (2004). He directed the movie In God's Country, a 2007 fiction film detailing the escape of a woman from a Mormon polygamous community and her adaptation to life in mainstream Canadian society. He is executive producer of The Limits (2007), a debut feature film by director Ben Mazzotta.
His television work includes A Nero Wolfe Mystery, Queer as Folk, Live Through This, ReGenesis , Blue Murder, Traders and Cold Squad.
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[edit] Selected filmography
[edit] Director
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[edit] Writer
- Low Life (1994)
- It's a Beautiful Day (1994)
- Use Once and Destroy (1995)
- Curtis's Charm (1995)
- Confessions of a Rabid Dog (1997)
[edit] Producer
- ReGenesis (2004–2007, TV series)
- "Haze" (2006, creative producer)
- "China" (2006, creative producer)
- "Escape Mutant" (2006, creative producer)
- "The Cocktail" (2006, creative producer)
- "Our Men in Havana" (2006, creative producer)
- "Gene in a Bottle" (2006, creative producer)
- "Dim & Dimmer" (2006, creative producer)
- "Massive Change" (2006, creative producer)
- "Listen to Him" (2006, creative producer)
- "The Wild and the Innocent" (2006, creative producer)
- The Limits (2007, executive producer)
[edit] External links
- John L'Ecuyer at the Internet Movie Database
- Northern Stars profile
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