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Daniel Grou
Daniel Grou
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Key Information

Daniel Grou (born August 19, 1967), frequently credited as Podz, is a Canadian film and television director, director of six feature films as well as episodes in dozen TV series.

Biography

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Daniel Grou was born in Montreal, Canada.[1] He has a bachelor's degree in film studies.[2]

He took the nickname "Podz" from the fact that his surname differs in spelling, but not in pronunciation, from the far more common French Canadian surname Groulx, meaning that he was frequently forced to state his surname to people as "Grou, pas d'lx".[3]

Career

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Grou started his career directing rock videos and English-language TV shows, Drop the Beat was one of his first projects.[1] He made more than 60 videoclips for various artists, including Laymen Twaist [fr] and René Dupéré.[2]

His credits include six feature films as well as episodes in dozen TV series.[4][5]

He directed all three seasons of Canadian French-language 19-2, and later was invited to direct the first episode of season two of the English version.[6]

Grou directed the first and the third seasons of Cardinal, missing the second one due to a scheduling conflict.[7][8][9] The series were adapted from Giles Blunt’s book Forty Words for Sorrow.[10]

Grou feature film 7 days, a story about a father's revenge,[11] was screened at Sundance festival and well-received by its audience[12] that appreciated ‘reimagining of the horrors of torture porn’ and praised Grou for bringing moral complexity to the genre and balancing the violence with impeccable direction.[2] However, some critics were sceptical and called the movie a ‘pseudo-artistic veneer’ that lacked catharsis and showed forgettable characters.[13]

Released in 2013, Vikings became one of Grou's most popular projects.[3] The showrunner Michael Hirst called Grou ‘a very gifted director’ and confessed that he was the only one to tackle the most challenging episodes.[14] For Vikings he was nominated for DGC's award for outstanding directorial achievement in a dramatic series.[15]

In 2021, he released Mafia Inc., a drama about the Canadian mafia based on a nonfiction book written by a former mob.[5][16]

Grou's film received high acclaim and he was complimented for a bold move into a genre completely dominated by Coppola's The Godfather.[2] The film was premiered at São Paulo International Film Festival before having its Canadian premiere in February 2020.[17][18]

In April 2023, Grou's upcoming project Kill Me Now was selected by Telefilm Canada for its Production Program.[19]

Awards

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Jean-Louis Foulquier and Podz in 2010

Grou is a four-time Gémeaux Award winner for Best Direction in a Dramatic Television Series or Program, winning in 2003 for the television film Exils, in 2006 and 2007 for Minuit, le soir, and in 2011 for the French version of 19-2. He was a Jutra Award nominee for Best Director in 2011 for 10½ and in 2013 for L'Affaire Dumont, a Genie Award nominee for Best Director at the 31st Genie Awards in 2010 for 10½, and a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Direction in a Dramatic Television Series at the 4th Canadian Screen Awards in 2016 for the 19-2 episode "School".

Filmography

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Cinema

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TV

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Daniel Grou is a Canadian film and television director, frequently credited as Podz, known for his prolific contributions to Quebecois television series and dramatic feature films, as well as his work on international English-language productions. Grou began his career in the early 1990s as a prop master and assistant director before transitioning to directing music videos and television episodes on shows such as The Hunger and Vampire High. He rose to prominence in French-language Canadian television with series including Minuit, le soir and 19-2, earning multiple Gémeaux Awards for directing, and later helmed episodes of Cardinal. His feature films, often characterized by intense dramatic narratives, include Les 7 jours du talion, 10½, L'Affaire Dumont, Miraculum, King Dave, and Mafia Inc., with several receiving festival acclaim and award nominations. In recent years, Grou has expanded into international projects, directing episodes of series such as Vikings, Three Pines, and Lupin.

Early life and education

Daniel Grou was born on August 19, 1967, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He is known professionally as Podz, a nickname originating from the phrase "pas de x" (no x), a small patronymic detail related to his surname Grou. Little public information is available about his early life or education.

Career

Beginnings in music videos and early television

Daniel Grou, professionally known as Podz, began his directing career in the 1990s by helming music videos, eventually directing more than 60 clips for a range of artists that included Laymen Twaist and René Dupéré. This work established his reputation in the Quebec music scene and extended to advertising spots during the same period. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Grou transitioned to narrative television directing, focusing initially on English-language series produced in Montreal. His credits from this foundational phase include episodes of Drop the Beat, three episodes of The Hunger in 1999, six episodes of Vampire High, and four episodes of Big Wolf on Campus. These projects represented his entry into episodic storytelling and marked the period when he began using the professional name Podz in credits. This early television experience laid the groundwork for his later career in more prominent series directing.

Quebec television directing

Daniel Grou, known professionally as Podz, has been one of the most prolific and influential directors in French-language Quebec television since the early 2000s, frequently directing entire seasons or complete runs of long-form dramatic series. His work often features intense character studies and innovative visual techniques, contributing significantly to the development of ambitious Quebec television fiction during this period. He directed 25 episodes of the acclaimed series Minuit, le soir (2005–2007), demonstrating his capacity for sustained creative control over multi-season projects. This commitment continued with the original French-language 19-2, where he directed all 30 episodes across its three seasons from 2011 to 2015, including notable long-take sequences that highlighted his stylistic precision and helped cement the series' reputation in Quebec. ) Grou's earlier and additional Quebec television contributions include directing the TV film Exils in 2002, episodes of Les Bougon, 3X Rien, and C.A., as well as all 13 episodes of Tu m'aimes-tu? in 2012. In more recent years, he directed the full 10 episodes of À propos d'Antoine in 2023 and co-directed episodes of La Maison in 2024, further underscoring his ongoing importance to contemporary Quebec television production.

Feature film directing

Daniel Grou has directed six feature films, establishing himself as a versatile filmmaker in Quebec cinema with works that often explore intense psychological, social, and criminal themes. His films frequently draw from real events or literary sources, blending thriller elements with dramatic depth, and have garnered selections and awards at international and domestic festivals. Grou's debut feature, Les 7 jours du Talion (released internationally as 7 Days, 2010), is a precise and faithful adaptation of Patrick Senécal's dark thriller novel. The film was selected for the official competition at the Sundance Film Festival in 2010 and also screened in official competition at the Festival du film francophone d’Angoulême. Also in 2010, Grou released 10½, a hard-hitting drama set in a semi-carceral environment, following a young delinquent reconnecting with his educator. The film opened the Festival du Nouveau Cinéma, earned the FIPRESCI international critics' prize for best foreign film at the Bratislava International Film Festival, and won the Grand Prix at the Mannheim-Heidelberg International Film Festival. In 2012, L'Affaire Dumont dramatized a major and notable judicial case from recent Quebec history. It opened the Festival du cinéma québécois (FCVQ) and received a nomination for Best Direction at the Prix Jutra. Grou's 2014 film Miraculum marked a shift toward a more open and ambitious choral structure, where the destinies of several characters intersect under exceptional circumstances. It served as the opening film at the Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois. In 2015, King Dave adapted Alexandre Goyette's monologue of the same name, with Goyette reprising his role as an adult-teen whose night spirals out of control. Notable for its stylistic execution as a single continuous take in its 99-minute runtime, the film opened the Fantasia International Film Festival in 2016, where it won the audience prize for best Canadian film. Grou's most recent feature, Mafia Inc. (2020), scripted by Sylvain Guy, examines the influence of the Sicilian Mafia in Montréal. It had its world premiere in the International Perspectives section at the Mostra Festival Internacional de Cinema de São Paulo in 2019. Grou's next feature project, Kill Me Now, a drama written by Brad Fraser and produced by Genco Pictures Inc. as a Canada-France coproduction, was selected by Telefilm Canada for its Production Program in April 2023.

International television directing

Daniel Grou has directed a number of high-profile English-language and international television series, expanding his career beyond Quebec productions into broader North American and global markets. He directed seven episodes of the historical drama series Vikings between 2016 and 2020. Showrunner Michael Hirst praised Grou's work, calling him "fantastic" and "a very gifted director" who was specifically chosen to helm particularly challenging and imaginative episodes, including the midseason finale of a season, due to his comfort with large-scale production and willingness to take risks. Grou had a major role in the crime series Cardinal, directing 12 episodes across seasons 1 and 3 from 2017 to 2019 while also serving as executive producer on those episodes. He directed all six episodes of the first season and returned to direct all six episodes of the third season, having missed the second season due to scheduling conflicts. The series achieved strong international success, launching with impressive ratings and critical acclaim before securing high-profile sales including to the BBC in the U.K., which significantly boosted Grou's international profile and career opportunities. He directed the first episode of season 2 of the English-language adaptation of 19-2. More recently, Grou directed three episodes of the Netflix series Lupin in 2023, two episodes of Transplant in 2022, and two episodes of Three Pines in 2022. These credits reflect his continued presence in international television directing.

Recognition

Awards and nominations

Daniel Grou has received widespread recognition for his work as a director, particularly in Quebec television. He has won the Prix Gémeaux (Gémeaux Awards) for Best Direction in a Dramatic Television Series/Program four times: in 2003 for the television film Exils, in 2006 and 2007 for the series Minuit, le soir, and in 2011 for the French-language version of 19-2. In feature film directing, Grou earned nominations for Best Director at the Jutra Awards for 10½ in 2011 and for L'Affaire Dumont in 2013, as well as a nomination for Best Director at the 31st Genie Awards for 10½ in 2010. He also received the Canadian Screen Award for Best Direction in a Dramatic Series for the "School" episode of 19-2 at the 4th Canadian Screen Awards in 2016. Additionally, Grou was nominated by the Directors Guild of Canada for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in a Dramatic Series for his work on Vikings.
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