77 Rue Chalgrin

77 Rue Chalgrin is a 1931 mystery film directed by Albert de Courville and starring Jean Murat, Léon Bary and Suzy Pierson.[1] It was made as the French-language version of the British film 77 Park Lane, based on a 1928 play by Walter C. Hackett.[2] It was shot at Walton Studios near London.

77 Rue Chalgrin
Directed byAlbert de Courville
Written byWalter C. Hackett (play)
Michael Powell
StarringJean Murat
Léon Bary
Suzy Pierson
CinematographyGeoffrey Faithfull
Mutz Greenbaum
Release date
17 November 1931
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageFrench

Cast

  • Jean Murat as Le baron de Cléves
  • Léon Bary as Morland
  • Suzy Pierson as Suzanne de Vandières
  • Lucette Desmoulins as Lucette
  • Victor Vina as Paul
  • Paul Menant as Sinclair
  • Pierre Nay as Carrington
  • Marc Dantzer as Philippe
  • Robert Cuperly as Donovan
  • Max Lerel as George Malton
  • Raymond Destac as Le commissaire
gollark: From my limited knowledge, it's kind of cool but also horribly confusing because everything has 1892791824 functions and there's no documentation.
gollark: Perhaps there's some ridiculous extremophile bacterium doing it, but something.
gollark: I don't think even biology can just casually make things into different isotopes.
gollark: The wikipedia page says they used a "scanning-tunneling microscope".
gollark: The electron microscope image one is a bunch of carbon monoxide molecules apparently.

References

  1. Bock & Bergfelder p.168
  2. Goble, Alan (1 January 1999). "The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film". Walter de Gruyter via Google Books.

Bibliography

  • Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.