
Michel Mpambara
Acting
Known For

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La semaine des 4 Julie

Bryan Audet and his two acolytes talk about everyday life, about the subjects who annoy them and those who bring them together, serious or much lighter subjects. Debate, laughter and fun in a relaxed atmosphere.
Tournée Générale

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Les pĂŞcheurs

When her husband dies unexpectedly, Élizabeth’s life is turned upside down. In addition to her two teenage sons, she now also has to take care of a farm replete with seasonal workers and her panic-prone in-laws, to whom she has never really been able to warm.
Le temps des framboises

A few hours following a rowdy night, body mover Luc Tellier is called to the scene of a fatal incident. When he sees the headless corpse, a dark thought crosses his mind.
Living Grounds

The documentary looks back on the evolution and key moments of black humour in Quebec.
Once Upon a Time a Black

Faro is a real goddess of a real tribe (the Bamana) in the West African country of Mali. In a landlocked country like Mali, covered in part by the Sahara Desert, water is a resource that can never be taken for granted. The Bamana village in Faro: Goddess of the Waters not only sits on a riverbank, but also depends for much of its food on fish from the river. Faro is the dominant character in this film, the unseen force for which all action takes place. (c) Ferdy on Films [Marilyn Ferdinand]
Faro: Goddess of the Waters

A young man approaching his 20s can either work for his mother in her restaurant or carve his own path and join his friends in Montreal. Before making this decision, he encounters Sara and Léa, two enticing young women who may derail his plans of becoming the greatest chef in the world.
We Have Forever

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La dérive douce d’un enfant de Petit-Goâve

A young Haitian (Michel Mpambara) who loves America visits his uncle (Maka Kotto) in Montreal.