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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Montreal_9708.jpeg]]
2->''"In Montreal they don't hate me because I'm Black. They hate me because I don't speak French."''
3-->--'''Alonzo Bodden'''
4
5Montreal is Canada's second-largest city and the largest city in the province of UsefulNotes/{{Quebec}}. It is also the second-largest French-speaking city in the world (after, of course, UsefulNotes/{{Paris}}).[[note]]A few argue that [[UsefulNotes/DemocraticRepublicOfTheCongo Kinshasa]] and [[UsefulNotes/CotedIvoire Abidjan]] come between Paris and Montreal, but those cities being in Africa, the locals only speak French as a lingua franca for administration, education, and sometimes trade, while various indigenous languages are spoken at home. In Montreal, French is unquestionably dominant, although English has a secondary role in government, business, and education.[[/note]] Its most (in)famous structure, Olympic Stadium, was home to the [[UsefulNotes/MajorLeagueBaseball Montreal Expos]] baseball team until they became the Washington Nationals. The Bell Centre (formerly the Molson Centre) is the home of the Montreal Canadiens (who previously called the storied Montreal Forum home), the oldest hockey team in the NHL and the team that has won the most Stanley Cups (24 in all, one of which predates the UsefulNotes/NationalHockeyLeague -- though they haven't been doing so well in the last two decades). While not as big a filming centre as UsefulNotes/{{Vancouver}}, quite a few movies are still filmed in Montreal. Its wide range of architecture allows the city to act as a cheap stand-in for many European cities. Montreal is also the home of a few VideoGame design studios: Creator/{{Ubisoft}} Montreal (''Franchise/PrinceOfPersia'' series and ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed''); Creator/ElectronicArts Montreal (''VideoGame/ArmyOfTwo''); [[Creator/SquareEnix Eidos Montreal]] (''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'') and the late Creator/{{THQ}} Montreal. The annual Just for Laughs Comedy Festival is the largest comedy festival in the world.
6
7The city is located on an island in the Saint Lawrence River in the southwestern corner of the province, home to nearly 2 million people, with another 2 million living in the surrounding greater Montreal area on the mainland and the neighboring island of Laval. Until the advent of the Lachine Canal and the later St. Lawrence Seaway system, Montreal was the furthest navigable point up the St. Lawrence River, a factor that helped its economy boom. The island is connected to the mainland by a network of bridges, many of which, most notably the high-traffic Champlain Bridge (which contributed to it being replaced in 2019), suffer from the city's notoriously poor road and infrastructure conditions, a target of a major corruption inquiry in recent years. Potholes are practically a feature rather than a bug on many of the roads, especially in the springtime. A peculiarity of Montreal geography is its directional orientation which uses the St. Lawrence River -- heading away from the river (roughly WNW) is heading north, heading towards the river (roughly ESE) is heading south, and Boulevard Saint-Laurent acts as the dividing line between East and West. Boulevard Saint-Laurent historically also acted as the cultural dividing line between the anglophone West Island and the francophone East Island (more on that below).
8
9Montreal is not an unequivocally French city despite the province's strong laws protecting its French heritage (which most obviously manifests itself in the rules regarding public signage in which the French words must be printed in bigger letters and more prominently than the English translation--sometimes people like to give an extra twist of the knife by printing the English in harder to read grayscale italics). Historically, Montreal attracted English, Scottish, and Irish settlers - this is best demonstrated by the city's coat of arms and flag, which contain a fleur-de-lys (French), a red rose (English), a purple thistle (Scottish), and a shamrock (Irish) - in 2017, both were modified to include a white pine in the middle to represent the indigenous people of Canada. Especially in the downtown area around Ste. Catherine Street even more so when approaching the largely English suburb of Westmount[[note]]an independent town entirely surrounded by Montreal[[/note]], quite a few of its inhabitants are native English-speakers (often [[UsefulNotes/{{Judaism}} Jewish]]), who often adopt a culture closer to American/Anglo-Canadian culture than their francophone compatriots. There are several enclaves of English speakers within the city: the predominantly Hasidic neighbourhood Outremont, the largely Jamaican and Iranian Notre-Dame-de-Grâce (NDG), and parts of St. Henri. The communities of the suburban "West Island", though not part of Montreal politically[[note]]although they were amalgamated with the city briefly in the early 2000s[[/note]], are also heavily English-speaking, especially Côte-Saint-Luc and Montreal-West). The city also plays host to two predominantly English universities ([=McGill=] and Concordia) as well as two French ones (Université de Montreal and UQAM). On top of all this, the city attracts quite a few immigrants; overall, it's a cultural mosaic similar to other major North American cities.
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11The busiest area is the downtown core; there's bars and restaurants everywhere and a strip club every other block on Ste. Catherine (we're quite serious: Ste. Catherine goes bar, restaurant, bar, strip club, interesting shops (''that'' kind and not), museum, bar, strip club, etc.). The popular definition of "downtown" is from St Denis to Atwater, along Ste. Catherine's up to Sherbrooke. Also, the Montreal {{Gayborhood}} is centered on Ste. Catherine just east of downtown. Generally a good deal. Other popular neighbourhoods for tourists include Old Montreal, south of Ste. Catherine by the river and full of churches, old buildings, and other eyecatching landmarks; the Mile End, made famous by being the stomping ground of Leonard Cohen and home to St. Viateur's famous bagels (get 'em while they're hot--if you order anything other than a sesame seed one it'll be cold); and occasionally the Plateau, home to the oft-maligned "[=McGill=] Ghetto" as well as most of the more famous landmarks on St Laurent, for instance Schwartz' Deli.
12
13Parking is annoying and public transit much less so, so it may be a good choice to park your car close to an outlying metro station, get a day pass, and take transit in. Also, whatever you do, do ''not'' wear a Boston Bruins shirt. [[BerserkButton It will end very badly]]; "LES TABARNAK DE BRUINS!" is practically the city's motto. Similarly, don't even ''try'' to say you like the Toronto Maple Leafs; a long-standing hatred of that team persists in Montreal to this day.
14
15One unique aspect of the local media market is that, while most other large Canadian cities receive the major US broadcast {{networks}} through affiliates based in cities at least as large as they are (much of southern Ontario gets the [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkState Buffalo]] or UsefulNotes/{{Detroit}} stations, Vancouver gets the UsefulNotes/{{Seattle}} ones, etc.), the closest American cities to Montreal are [[UsefulNotes/{{Vermont}} Burlington, Vermont]] and [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkState Plattsburgh, New York]], whose combined metropolitan areas (city and suburbs together) are less than ''one-twelfth'' the population of the Montreal area. Consequently, stations in this media market have the largest city in their broadcast areas in another country. It leads to the strange situation where American TV stations carry large amounts of advertising for foreign businesses -- a good percentage of English-language advertising for Montreal businesses aimed at Montrealers is carried on Burlington and Plattsburgh stations, and ads in French are not unheard of (although satellite services' carrying the main East Coast feeds out of UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity has put a dent in this in recent years).
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17Close proximity to Quebec has another interesting effect on Vermont and far northern New York. As they sit right next to a French-speaking area that has far more people than they do (and which sends a lot of tourists their way[[note]]There are also quite a bit of Americans going up to Quebec, as the legal drinking age there is 18[[/note]]), it is one of the few regions of the country where French, not Spanish, is the default second language. Road signage on parts of the Adirondack Northway is in English and French while I-89 in Vermont has signs with distances in kilometers, the tourist guides at Fort Ticonderoga (or Fort Carillon, the French name for it) are printed in both languages, and it's not uncommon to hear people on the street speaking in French. Montreal is also the northern terminus of the UsefulNotes/{{Amtrak}} ''Adirondack'' service from UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity's Penn Station (one of three Canadian termini of Amtrak services, and the only francophone one).
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19Montreal is known for its epic music scene. Having been hailed as the most creative city in North America in the early 2000s, it has produced such bands as Music/ArcadeFire, Malajube, Young Galaxy (recent Polaris prize shortlisters), Stars, Coeur de Pirate, Wolf Parade, The Stills, Grimes, Ought, and The Dears. As well it was/is home to music royalty Music/LeonardCohen and Music/RufusWainwright, among others. The yearly Montreal Jazz Festival is a huge event that draws in dozens of the biggest names in the genre. [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff Surprisingly, there is also a very big]] TechnicalDeathMetal following; numerous big names in the genre (Music/{{Cryptopsy}}, Music/{{Neuraxis}}, Martyr, Augury, Beyond Creation, Quo Vadis, etc.) hail from either the city proper or surrounding locales, and touring acts in the genre are likely to experience sold-out crowds at Les Foufounes Electriques (''The Electric Booties'', literally), the city's longstanding go-to venue for underground touring acts.
20
21As far as transit goes, Montreal is served by a number of systems. The Montreal Metro is notable as being one of only two rapid transit systems in North America (the other being the UsefulNotes/MexicoCity Metro) to use rubber-tired trains, like the [[UsefulNotes/LeMetropolitain Paris Metro]] (there's even an entrance to Square-Victoria–OACI station in the style of the famous ArtNouveau Paris Metro entrances that was given as a gift from the RATP). In addition to the Metro, Montreal also has the Exo, a commuter rail service, and as of 2023, another, longer-range rail rapid transit system operated independently of the Metro called the Réseau express métropolitain, or REM.
22
23[[GratuitousIambicPentameter Did, we, MENtion, that it's]] [[DramaticPause .....]] [[LargeHam ALso]], Creator/WilliamShatner's, [[LargeHam BIRTHPLACE]]?[[note]]Shatner is an Anglophone Conservative Jewish Montrealer of Hungarian descent.[[/note]]
24----
25
26!!Works set in Montreal
27!!! Film and TV
28* ''18 to Life''
29* ''Series/NineteenTwo''
30* ''Film/TheJackal'' (which both had scenes set in Montreal, and also used Montreal locations for scenes set elsewhere, e.g. the Montreal metro filling in for the Washington DC one)
31* ''Series/LaPetiteVie''
32* ''Film/TheWholeNineYards''
33* ''Film/TheScore''
34* ''Film/JesusOfMontreal''
35* ''Film/TakingLives'' (which they clearly showed with the establishing shots of the Château Frontenac, [[ArtisticLicenseGeography the most famous landmark in Quebec City]])
36* ''Film/BladesOfGlory''
37* ''Film/BonCopBadCop''
38* ''Film/BarneysVersion''
39* ''Le Déclin de l'empire américain'' (''Film/TheDeclineOfTheAmericanEmpire'') and its sequel ''Les Invasions barbares'' (''Film/TheBarbarianInvasions'', winner of an Oscar for Best Foreign Picture). ''L'Âge des ténèbres'' (''The Age of Ignorance'', by the same director) also took place in Montreal.
40* ''J'ai tué ma mère'' (''Film/IKilledMyMother'')
41* ''Film/TheFly1958'' and its sequel, ''Film/ReturnOfTheFly''
42* ''WesternAnimation/FredsHead''
43* ''Film/HoldUp'' (filmed there too)
44* ''WesternAnimation/JacobTwoTwo'' (the 2000's animated series)
45* ''Film/MonsieurLazhar''
46* ''Film/TheRedViolin''
47* ''Series/UnGarsUneFille''
48* ''Film/MamboItaliano''
49* The film adaptation of ''Literature/LifeOfPi'' is set in Montréal (the present-day scenes, not the flashbacks).
50
51!!! Other
52* ''Webcomic/MenageA3'' (and its spin-off ''Webcomic/StickyDillyBuns'')
53* ''WebVideo/YidLifeCrisis''
54
55!!Movies and TV Series filmed in Montreal
56* ''Series/AlertMissingPersonsUnit'', doubling for Philadelphia (and a few other American cities)
57* ''Confessions of a Dangerous Mind''
58* ''Film/TheDayAfterTomorrow''
59* ''Series/GetSmart''
60* ''Film/TheMummyTombOfTheDragonEmperor''
61* ''Series/BigWolfOnCampus''
62* ''Series/BlueMountainState''
63* ''Series/TheDeadZone''
64* ''Film/JohnnyMnemonic''
65* ''Film/ThreeHundred''
66* ''Film/TheAdventuresOfPlutoNash''
67* ''Film/AloneInTheDark2005''
68* ''Film/{{Arrival}}''
69* ''Film/TheArtOfWar''
70* ''Film/BladesOfGlory''
71* ''Death Race 3000''
72* ''Film/HighlanderIIITheSorcerer''
73* ''Film/JohnQ''
74* ''Film/NightAtTheMuseum: Battle of the Smithsonian''
75* ''Film/{{Screamers}}''
76* ''Film/TheSpiderwickChronicles''
77* ''Film/TheTerminal'' (exterior shots; interior shots were filmed on a purpose-built set in L.A.)
78* ''Film/TwelveMonkeys''
79* ''Film/BattlefieldEarth''
80* ''Series/BeingHumanUS'', doubling for UsefulNotes/{{Boston}}
81* ''Film/WarmBodies''
82* ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'', doubling for UsefulNotes/{{Paris}}, and sections of the Pentagon scene are from the Arts Building at [=McGill=] University.
83* ''Film/XMenApocalypse'': The East Berlin fight club venue is the Corona Theatre in Old Montreal.
84* ''Film/TheJackal'', the metro station's scenes that double for Washington's metro station.
85* ''Film/TheBoneCollector''
86* ''Film/SnakeEyes''
87* ''Film/ScreamVI'', doubling for UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity.

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