Drifting States

Drifting States (French: Les États nordiques) is a Canadian docufiction film, directed by Denis Côté and released in 2005.

[1] The film stars Christian Leblanc as Christian, a man from Montreal who is hiding out in the isolated town of Radisson after mercy killing his chronically ill mother.

[2] The film, Côté's feature-length debut, was shot on a budget of just $80,000, and performed primarily by non-professional actors.

[3] Writing for 24 images, André Roy compared the film to the works of Jacques Leduc, particularly Ordinary Tenderness (Tendresse ordinaire) and The Last Glacier (Le dernier glacier).

This article related to a Canadian documentary film of the 2000s is a stub.