MS Film Fest Festivals

Fauve

Two boys spend a summer afternoon playing increasingly reckless games in an abandoned open-pit mine in rural Quebec. Their one-upmanship — jumping from heights, daring each other deeper into the quarry — starts as innocent fun but escalates into something far more dangerous when they venture into the mine’s flooded tailings.

Editorial Perspective

Jeremy Comte’s Fauve is a master class in tonal control. For its first half, it plays like a nostalgic childhood adventure film — golden light, carefree laughter, the joy of unsupervised freedom. Then the ground shifts, literally, and the film becomes something else entirely. Comte’s refusal to telegraph the turn is what makes it so devastating; the horror emerges organically from the landscape itself, as if the earth were simply reclaiming what was always hers. The final shot is one of the most haunting images in recent short cinema.

Director: Jeremy Comte

Country: Canada

Runtime: 16 min

Festival Year: 2018

Awards: Academy Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Film (2019)

Where to Watch

Available on the National Film Board of Canada website and Vimeo.

Historical data reconstructed from archive.org snapshots of the Manhattan Short Film Festival website.

Film Details

  • Festival Year: 2018
  • Country of Origin: Canada
  • Directed by: Jérémy Comte
  • Source: This page reconstructs historical data from Wayback Machine snapshots of msfilmfest.com (2018).

Festival Context

Fauve was selected as a finalist at the Manhattan Short Film Festival in 2018. The Manhattan Short Film Festival is an annual event that screens finalist films simultaneously across hundreds of venues worldwide, with audiences voting for the winner. Representing Canada, this film joined a diverse international lineup that year. View all 2018 finalists →

Where to Watch

Short-film discoverability remains limited compared to feature-length releases. For Fauve, check platforms that specialize in short-form cinema: Vimeo Staff Picks, MUBI Shorts, the Criterion Channel short film collection, and YouTube channels like Omeleto. Direct streaming URLs for individual short films change frequently, and no permanent viewing link is guaranteed. Searching for Jérémy Comte on these platforms may surface this and other works by the same filmmaker.

Related Entries