
Marie-Claire Marcotte
Acting
Biography
Canadian bilingual (French/English) Screenwriter and Director, Marie-Claire Marcotte has created and written two digital series, written and directed several short films and has completed her debut feature film Neon Dreaming. Marcotte's work has garnered 11 prizes in the festival circuit and 15 nominations, including a Special Mention at the Los Angeles Film Awards.
Known For

Every time Jonathan Plourde, a 23-year-old designer, falls in love, a strange accident kills his girlfriend. With his friends, he starts looking for a way to get rid of this curse.
La malédiction de Jonathan Plourde

Larry, a 16-year-old Tlicho Indian, lives in the small northern town of Fort Simmer. He has a crush on his classmate, Juliet Hope. Larry's past holds a variety of terrors—his father is abusive and he once had an accident that nearly killed him. When Johnny Beck , a young Métis from Hay River, moves to town, things heat up, for better or worse.
The Lesser Blessed

Running With Violet is a serialized dramedy about a lonely housewife, a single mother and her toddler who try to ditch their small town but soon get entangled in a thrilling open road adventure.
Running With Violet
No description available.
Abigaëlle et le date coaching

8-year-old Billie leans on her vivid imagination, and her loyal best friend Sherry, to unravel the web of secrets shrouding her mother’s true identity. Believing that her mother is a ballerina icon, Billie stops at nothing to try to find her. As Billie delves deeper into the mysteries of her family’s past, she begins to question the true intentions of the ones closest to her — her grandma and dad. Billie must decide whether to embrace her imperfect family or continue living in the comfort of their secrets.
Neon Dreaming

Margot Swann, a professional surfer and Olympic hopeful, sees her life turned upside down after taking radical steps to preserve the wilderness of her native village on Vancouver Island.
Surf Bay, West Coast
What gets lost when female voices are stymied during the creative process? Pairing intimate interviews with absurdist re-enactments, Joyce Wong crafts a tartly subversive look at patriarchy and racism in the film industry.