Lost Song (film)
[2] Brian D. Johnson of Maclean's wrote, "This story of a woman’s quiet descent into postpartum depression at a summer cottage in Quebec is...'a perfect marriage of character and landscape.'And as a mediation on dappled lake light and addled psychology, it’s beautifully composed, both austere and lyrical.[4] Damon D’Oliveira, a member of the Toronto International Film Festival Group which compiled the list, said, "The beauty of Rodrigue Jean's Lost Song is in its simplicity.He has crafted a spare and uncompromising film – rife with humanity – about first-time parents grappling with the mounting pressures of caring for a newborn.Gracefully understated performances creep up and deliver a gut punch at the film's unsettling climax.