Maurice Richard (film)

For the Australian 2013 film, see The Rocket (2013 film).
Maurice Richard

Film poster
Directed by Charles Binamé
Produced by Daniel Louis
Denise Robert
Written by Ken Scott
Starring Roy Dupuis
Julie Le Breton
Stephen McHattie
Cinematography Pierre Gill
Edited by Michel Arcand
Distributed by Alliance Atlantis Vivafilm, Universal Pictures
Release dates
  • 25 November 2005 (2005-11-25)
Running time
124 mins
Country Canada
Language French, English
Budget 8,000,000

Maurice Richard is a French language Canadian biopic about the ice hockey player Maurice "The Rocket" Richard. It was released in English Canada as The Rocket: The Maurice Richard Story. It was released in the United States as The Rocket: The Legend of Rocket Richard and was distributed by Universal Studios. It stars Roy Dupuis in the title role and was directed by Charles Binamé. It features appearances by National Hockey League players Mike Ricci, Sean Avery, Vincent Lecavalier, Philippe Sauvé, Stéphane Quintal, Ian Laperrière, and Pascal Dupuis.

Plot

The film depicts an era widely considered a cornerstone of the NHL's history. It shows the life of 'The Rocket' beginning with his years as a teenager, his ascension to the Montreal Canadiens, up to the Richard Riot, showing a full spectrum of Richard's career. It ends the year before Richard brought Montréal to an unrivaled record of five Stanley Cup Championships in a row.

The film begins as the Canadiens coach argues for continuing the hockey game even though the Richard Riot is occurring. The film then rolls to Maurice laboring as a teenager. Maurice later plays hockey for a minor league and soon tries out for the Canadiens. He tries out and makes it on the team. Maurice scores several goals but is injured early in his first season. People begin to call Maurice a lemon and a waste of money. Maurice recovers from his injury but is asked to sit out. Later he and his wife receive a baby girl who weighs 9 pounds (4 kg). Maurice goes to his coach and asks to exchange the number 15 for the number 9. Maurice will continue to play and breaks the record of 44 goals in one season. In a game with the New York Rangers, he encounters Bob Dill, a player sent out to attack Maurice to prevent him from beating the record. Maurice however, takes out Dill.

As the movie proceeds, other players attempt to take out Maurice but Maurice fights back. At one point Maurice is tripped and is required to have stitches. Maurice receives the stitches but continues playing near the end of the game and scores the game-winning goal. Later on, a referee grabs Maurice and allows the other hockey player to hit him; Maurice retaliates by hitting the referee. He is given a penalty denying him from playing for the rest of the season and the play offs and the Richard Riot begins. Maurice gives a speech to Montréal telling that he won't give up and will return next year. The movie shows a few goals from the real Maurice Richard. The film ends as Maurice walks out the stadium with a message that says "Maurice played for 5 more years" and "During which, he won 5 Stanley Cups in a row."[1]

Cast

Maurice Richard Roy Dupuis
Lucille Richard Julie Le Breton
Dick Irvin Stephen McHattie
Mr. Norchet Michel Barrette
Elmer Lach Mike Ricci
Emile Bouchard Patrice Robitaille
Jean Beliveau Vincent Lecavalier
Bernie Geoffrion Ian Laperriere
Toe Blake Randy Thomas
Tommy Gorman Philip Craig
Bob Dill Sean Avery
Frank Selke Tony Calabretta
Clarence Campbell Tedd Dillon
Milt Schmidt Pascal Dupuis
Dollard St. Laurent Stephane Quintal
Jim Henry Philippe Sauve

Production

The dialogue and hockey scenes were produced to be as true to reality as possible; they were reviewed by Richard himself before he died and also by his wife, his children, and Dick Irvin, Jr.'s written and recorded testimonies and memories about his father and reporters from the era. The events presented as facts and the dialogue have been researched thoroughly to present the most factually accurate film possible. Many sources were consulted for facts within the movie, including family, friends, the public, the media recording those events, various journalists reporting on the events of that time, Richard's barber, and previous teams in the juvenile league (he played for five different teams in different leagues).

The film was shot in Québec by Cinémaginaire for a budget of (CAD) $8,000,000 and distributed by Alliance Atlantis and Odeon.

Distribution

Maurice Richard was first released in French throughout Québec in November 2005, then throughout Canada with English subtitles in April 2006. The distribution rights were marketed at the Cannes Film Festival by Telefilm Canada, whose press release of 30 May 2006, reports that "Cinémaginaire producer Denise Robert inked deals for The Rocket (Maurice Richard) with five Scandinavian countries: Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Denmark." It was released in the United States as The Rocket: The Legend of Rocket Richard and was distributed by Palm Pictures.

Awards and recognition

Wikinews has related news: Canada's best films of 2006 honoured at Genie Awards

The film was nominated in 13 categories for the 27th Genie Awards in 2007, winning nine awards:

Nominations:

It was also nominated for a Jutra Award in 14 categories, including Best Actor for Roy Dupuis; but it did not receive the award.[2]

The film was screened in competition at Tokyo International Film Festival where Dupuis won the "Best Actor" prize.

References

Notes
  1. "The Rocket (Synopsis)". Tribute: Canada's Favourite In-Theatre Magazine. Tribute.ca (Tribute Entertainment Media Group). Retrieved 2008-11-10.
  2. "Arts & Entertainment: 'C.R.A.Z.Y.', 'Rocket' Sweep Jutra Award Nominations" (Web). CBC Arts 2 (CBC News). CBCnews.ca (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). 2006-02-07. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
Bibliography

External links


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