Adélaïde (film)

Adélaïde is a 1968 French drama film directed by Jean-Daniel Simon and starring Ingrid Thulin, Jean Sorel and Sylvie Fennec. [1] In English it is sometimes known as The Depraved.[2] It was based on a novella by Joseph-Arthur de Gobineau and produced by Pierre Kalfon.

Adélaïde
Directed byJean-Daniel Simon
Written byJean-Daniel Simon
StarringIngrid Thulin
Jean Sorel
Music byPierre Vassiliu
CinematographyPatrice Pouget
Release date
1968
Running time
90 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Plot

A young woman, named Adélaïde lives in France, and she is pursued by many suitors, but she turns them all down because her one true love has gone away to war, and she has not heard of him for months, though she does not give up hope and lies in wait of his return. In the end he dies in the war, killed by a German soldier, but she knows in her heart he is still with her.

Cast

gollark: (somehow I wrote microUSB there, oops)
gollark: I'm comparing it to USB-A for point 4.
gollark: <@!111608748027445248> - Too many different things over identical looking physical connectors: a "USB-C" port might support power-delivery *input*, power-delivery *output*, Thunderbolt, two different incompatible kinds of video output, and various speeds from USB 2.0 to USB 3.2 Gen2x2 (whyyy).- The ports on devices can end up wearing out problematically, though I don't know if this is better or worse than on competitors like Lightning or µUSB.- A lot of peripherals still don't support it, though this is hardly *its* fault.- I think the smaller connector means you can't put as much weight on it safely, for bigger USB stick-y devices, though I am not sure about this.
gollark: Eh. Sort of. It has its own problems.
gollark: Also, it's USB-C, so you'll need a cable for that.

References

  1. "ADELAIDE". unifrance.org. Retrieved 2014-03-18.
  2. BFI.org
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