Easy, Down There!
Easy, Down There! (French: Doucement les basses, Italian: L'uomo di Saint-Michael) is a 1971 French-Italian comedy film starring Alain Delon.
Easy, Down There! | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Directed by | Jacques Deray |
Produced by | Alain Delon |
Written by | Pascal Jardin |
Starring | Alain Delon Paul Meurisse Nathalie Delon |
Music by | Claude Bolling |
Cinematography | Jean-Jacques Tarbès |
Release date |
|
Language | French |
Box office | 1,009,536 admissions (France)[1] |
Plot
Cast
- Alain Delon as Simon Médieu
- Paul Meurisse as L'évêque
- Nathalie Delon as Rita
- Julien Guiomar as Francisco
- Paul Préboist as The old choir boy
- Serge Davri as Brigadier
- Carlo Nell as Gendarme
- Philippe Castelli as Grand vicaire
- Serge Davri as Brigadier
- André Bollet as Mickey
gollark: That's currently all I have to say about Android opensourceness. I might come up with more later.
gollark: Banking apps use this for """security""", mostly, as well as a bunch of other ones because they can.
gollark: Google has a thing called "SafetyNet" which allows apps to refuse to run on unlocked devices. You might think "well, surely you could just patch apps to not check, or make a fake SafetyNet always say yes". And this does work in some cases, but SafetyNet also uploads lots of data about your device to Google servers and has *them* run some proprietary ineffable checks on it and give a cryptographically signed attestation saying "yes, this is an Approved™ device" or "no, it is not", which the app's backend can check regardless of what your device does.
gollark: The situation is also slightly worse than *that*. Now, there is an open source Play Services reimplementation called microG. You can install this if you're running a custom system image, and it pretends to be (via signature spoofing, a feature which the LineageOS team refuse to add because of entirely false "security" concerns, but which is widely available in some custom ROMs anyway) Google Play Services. Cool and good™, yes? But no, not really. Because if your bootloader is unlocked, a bunch of apps won't work for *other* stupid reasons!
gollark: If you do remove it, half your apps will break, because guess what, they depend on Google Play Services for some arbitrary feature.
References
- Box Office information for film at Box Office Story
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.