Nicolas Lachapelle

Nicolas Lachapelle is a Canadian documentary filmmaker from Quebec.[1] He is most noted for his 2022 short documentary film Zug Island, which was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Short Documentary at the 25th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2023,[2] and a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Short Documentary at the 12th Canadian Screen Awards in 2024.[3]

His prior films have included Lights Above Water (Lumières sur l'eau) and What Remains When We're Gone (Le Monde après nous).[4] In 2023 he released Retour à Normétal, a sound documentary about the Quebec mining town of Normétal.[1] In 2024, he published La Chasse Interdite, a book and sound documentary following a hunting expedition in the Innu community of Pakua Shipi on the Basse-Côte-Nord.[5] The project takes the form of an art book, a photo report and a sound documentary.[5][6]

In 2025 he released The Punk of Natashquan (Le Punk de Natashquan),[7] which was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Short Documentary at the 27th Quebec Cinema Awards.[8]

References