The Savage Woman (1991 film)
| The Savage Woman | |
|---|---|
| La Demoiselle sauvage | |
| Directed by | Léa Pool |
| Written by | Léa Pool Michel Langlois Laurent Gagliardi |
| Based on | "La Demoiselle sauvage" by S. Corinna Bille |
| Produced by | Denise Robert |
| Starring | Patricia Tulasne Matthias Habich |
| Cinematography | Georges Dufaux |
| Edited by | Alain Belhumeur |
| Music by | Jean Corriveau |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
| Country | Canada |
| Language | French |
The Savage Woman (French: La Demoiselle sauvage) is a Canadian drama film from Quebec, released in 1991. Directed by Léa Pool, the film stars Patricia Tulasne as Marianne, a young Canadian expatriate in Switzerland who escapes into the mountains after being assaulted by her boyfriend, and meets Élysée (Matthias Habich), an engineer camped out for the summer to monitor a hydroelectric dam, with whom she begins a new romance before eventually revealing that she killed her attacker.
The film was based on a short story by Swiss writer S. Corinna Bille.
The film premiered in August 1991 at the Montreal World Film Festival. It won the award for Best Canadian Film at that festival.