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film noir au canal

Suspense takes centre stage this summer at Montreal's favourite waterfront film festival. From July 14 to August 18, Film Noir au Canal is bringing free screenings of noir cinema classics and modern thrillers to Square Saint-Patrick every Sunday night. The only thing not shrouded in mystery is the price — it's all free.

Since 2015, this festival has turned the Lachine Canal into a noir lover's dream. Each evening kicks off with live music and cinephile presentations at 7:30 p.m., followed by the main screening.

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Cinéma sous les étoiles is back for its 14th edition this summer. The festival stages free documentary film screenings in Montreal parks. This year, 15 parks will host a total of 45 screenings.

The complete program is forthcoming. But organizers are so far highlighting the inclusion of works such as Big Fight in Little Chinatown by Karen Cho, Free Money by Sam Soko and Lauren DeFilippo, J’ai placé ma mère by Denys Desjardins, Mon pays imaginaire by Patricio Guzmán, Le Mythe de la Femme Noire by Ayana O’Shun, and Riposte féministe by Marie Perennès and Simon Depardon.

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Film Noir au Canal, a celebration of cult-hit, hard-boiled crime movies, is coming back to the southern bank of Montreal's Lachine Canal this summer. The event draws thousands of film noir enthusiasts — and others just looking for a fun summer evening activity — every year.

The festival's seventh edition will return to Square Saint-Patrick at the corner of rues Wellington and Saint-Patrick every Sunday between July 16 and August 20, 2023. Screenings begin at dusk. Rained-out screenings will take place a day later, on Monday.

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High five! — we've made it through another week of work. In the city of festivals, Montrealers can "work hard, play hard" as there are always tons of things to do on weekends.

Whether you're looking to dance it out to evacuate the stress, watch a show, drink or eat tons of food, the 514 has something for everyone.

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Film Noir au Canal, Montreal's festival of classic hard-boiled thrillers, continues Sunday, August 7, with a screening of Robert Aldrich's 1955 film Kiss Me Deadly.

The screening (with the original English audio and French subtitles) will begin at 8:30 p.m. in Square Saint-Patrick, between the Lachine Canal and rues Wellington and Saint-Patrick in Montreal's Pointe-Saint-Charles neighbourhood.

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Film noir au Canal, a festival of dark hard-boiled dramas, is returning for the first time in three years with free movie screenings along the Lachine Canal this summer. Since MTL Blog first reported on its comeback, organizers have released a few more details about the highly-anticipated event.

Like previous editions, Film noir au Canal 2022 will take place in Square Saint-Patrick, a park between the canal and rue Wellington in Pointe-Saint-Charles. Live musical performances and presentations by genre experts will set the mood as attendees set up in the shadow of the rusting bridges and brick edifices of the former industrial corridor.

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Film noir au canal is back! Since 2015, the event has celebrated hard-boiled police dramas with free outdoor movie screenings on the banks of Montreal's Lachine Canal.

The pandemic forced its cancellation in 2020 and 2021, but organizers confirmed with MTL Blog that it will return between July 17 and August 21, 2022. More details, including the program, are forthcoming.

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