Pigs Are Seldom Clean (French: On n'engraisse pas les cochons à l'eau claire, lit. "One Doesn't Fatten Pigs in Clean Water") is a Canadian drama film, directed by Jean Pierre Lefebvre and released in 1973.[1] The film stars Jean-René Ouellet as Bob Tremblay, an undercover Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer in Hull, Quebec, whose fiancée Hélène is kidnapped and raped by the criminal gang he is infiltrating after his identity is discovered.[2]

Pigs Are Seldom Clean
FrenchOn n'engraisse pas les cochons à l'eau claire
Directed byJean Pierre Lefebvre
Written byJean-Pierre Lefebvre
Produced byMarguerite Duparc
Claude Godbout
StarringJean-René Ouellet
Louise Cuerrier
Maryse Pelletier
CinematographyGuy Dufaux
Edited byMarguerite Duparc
Production
companies
Les Productions Prisma
Cinak
Distributed byDisci
Release date
  • November 15, 1973 (1973-11-15)
Running time
112 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageFrench

The film's cast also includes Marthe Nadeau, Maryse Pelletier, J.-Léo Gagnon, Jean-Pierre Saulnier, Louise Cuerrier and Denys Arcand.

Jay Scott of The Globe and Mail characterized the film as "Lefebvre's only melodrama, a film that could almost be a product of the new German Cinema."[3]

References

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  1. ^ Gerald Pratley, A Century of Canadian Cinema. Lynx Images, 2003. ISBN 1-894073-21-5. p. 170.
  2. ^ Charles-Henri Ramond, "On n’engraisse pas les cochons à l’eau claire – Film de Jean Pierre Lefebvre". Films du Québec, April 12, 2009.
  3. ^ Jay Scott, "Lefebvre's deceptive simplicity". The Globe and Mail, May 22, 1982.
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