Two childhood best friends are asked to share a kiss for the purposes of a student short film. Soon, a lingering doubt sets in, confronting both men with their preferences, threatening the brotherhood of their social circle, and, eventually, changing their lives.
Gabriel D'Almeida Freitas
Matthias
Xavier Dolan
Maxime
Pier-Luc Funk
Rivette
Samuel Gauthier
Frank
Antoine Pilon
Brass
Adib Alkhalidey
Shariff
Micheline Bernard
Francine
Anne Dorval
Manon
Marilyn Castonguay
Sarah
Catherine Brunet
Lisa
Harris Dickinson
McAfee
Camille Felton
Erika Rivette
Anne-Marie Cadieux
Martine
Monique Spaziani
Colette
Jacques Lavallée
Courtemanche
Louis-Julien Durso
Matisse
Johanne Garneau
Neighbor on Balcony
Alexandre Bourgeois
Julien
Jean Harvey
Grandmaster
Connor McMahon
Lawyer in the Elevator
Michael Kelly
Bar Customer (uncredited)
Louise Bombardier
Tante Ginette
Claude Gasse
Woman sitting at the Bar
Agnès Bouchard
Dancer
Guenièvre Sandré
Barmaid
Julie Beauchemin
Ginette's Superior
William Pelletier
Student on the Bus
Audrey McDonald
Max's Friend
Dakota Jamal Wellman
Lawyer in the Elevator
Beverly Lowe
Grandmaster's Colleague
Nathalie Doummar
Young Pregnant Woman
Alice Pascual
Sarah's Friend
Félix Paquette
Shariff's Friend
Maude Demers-Rivard
Shariff's Friend
Victor Billo
Shariff's Friend
Director, Writer
Xavier Dolan
August 12, 2019
8
It’s hard not to be swept up by ‘Matthias and Maxime’. This is a film made with such love and care, sincerity and grace, showcasing everything that makes Xavier Dolan such an arresting filmmaker and distilled into their purest form. What made my heart soar was in how it laid bare how complex human relationships are, how pointless such binaries as gender and sexuality are, how love between two people is greater than simply defined as friendship or romance. ‘Matthias and Maxime’ refuses to play into such simplistic categories, instead celebrating the wonder of love and human connection without the need for them. Maybe some viewers will try and pigeonhole the protagonists as “gay“ rather than just two people in love to make themselves feel more comfortable, much like the bi-erasure in many responses to <a href=“/article/review-call-me-by-your-name-beautiful-beyond-description“>‘Call Me By Your Name’</a>, so pointlessly obsessed are we with useless outdated labels, but that would be such a loss to their experience of the richness of this film. ‘Matthias and Maxime’ is a quiet triumph, a tender love story beautifully told, a reminder of how deep the rivers of love can go, how violent travelling them can be and how so very worth the journey is. - Daniel Lammin
Read Daniel's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-matthias-and-maxime-a-magical-film-on-the-complexity-of-friendship-and-love