

A writer, Kamouraska is based on a real nineteenth-century love-triangle in rural Québec. It paints a poetic and terrifying tableau of the life of Elisabeth d'Aulnières: her marriage to Antoine Tassy, squire of Kamouraska; his violent murder; and her passion for George Nelson, an American doctor. Passionate and evocative, Kamouraska is the timeless story of one woman's destructive commitment to an ideal love.
Ratings
3.5
Cast

Geneviève Bujold
Élisabeth

Richard Jordan
Georges Nelson

Marcel Cuvelier
Jérôme
Suzie Baillargeon
Aurélie

Huguette Oligny
La mère d'Élisabeth

Philippe Léotard
Antoine

Janine Sutto
Tante

Olivette Thibault
Tante
Marie Fresnières
Tante
Camille Bernard
La mère d'Antoine
Colette Cortois
Florida
Gigi Duckett
Anne-Marie
Marcel Marineau
Greffier, médecin
Len Watt
Le gouverneur

Rita Lafontaine
Une servante
André Cailloux
Ernest

Émile Genest
Aubergiste

Françoise Berd
Sa femme

Gilles Latulippe
Clermont

Denise Proulx
Victoire
Serge L'Italien
Assistant roux

Jean-Louis Paris
Paul Hus
Alexandre Gauvreau
Le prêtre
Yan Barcelo
Yvon Barrette
Marie-Thérèse Beaulieu
Dame au thé
Gaétane Bélanger
Monique Bélisle
La fille qui rit
Germaine Bougie
Yolande Bourguignon
Dominique Brunet
Jean Brunet
Lyne Champagne
Monique Champagne
L'hotesse à St-Ours
Anne-Marie Ducharme
Dame au thé
Nini Durand

J. Léo Gagnon
Pat Gagnon

Claude Gai

Amulette Garneau

Paul Gauthier
Paul Gélinas
Nettie Harris
Madeleine Langlois
Priscilla Lapointe

Yvon Leroux
Policier
Jean Mathieu
Michel Milleret

Thérèse Morange

Marthe Nadeau
Dame du thé
Jean Scheler
Marc Saugavinski
Steve Talbot
Yvette Thuot

Gisèle Trépanier
André Vézina
Véronique Vilbert
Horse Marine
Crew
Director
Screenplay
Novel
Writer
Director of Photography
Editor
Music
Art Direction
Producer
Production Design
Set Decoration
Details
Release Date
1973-07-18
Runtime
175 min
Original Language
French
Languages
French
English
Production Companies
Les Productions Carle-Lamy
Canadian Film Development Corporation
France Cinéma Productions
Countries
Canada
France
Genres
Drama
History