Monday, September 3, 2012

147 ... Les aventuriers (1967)....DELON

LES AVENTURIERS

* * * 1967 - France * * *

AKA: The Last Adventure
Tre avventurieri

Director: Robert Enrico

Starring: Alain Delon, Lino Ventura, Joanna Shimkus

Rated R

"Two adventurers and a beautiful woman go on a very engaging treasure hunt........In this adventure, a hotshot pilot loses his license after he attempts to fly through the Arc de Triumph in Paris. Later he and his buddy head for the Congo accompanied by an unsuccessful female artist to locate a crashed plane supposedly filled with a fabulous treasure. Unfortunately, they are followed by greedy crooks who want the treasure for themselves..........Lost souls start it, but ends like a Greek epic, You may not guess what a masterpiece you are watching at the beginning. but as the powerful drama unfolds, you get more and more involved,until the last shot of the last scene."

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CAST

Alain Delon  - Manu
Lino Ventura  - Roland
Joanna Shimkus  - Letitia
Serge Reggiani  - Pilot
Irène Tunc   
Paul Crauchet 
  Guy Delorme 
  Odile Poisson  - Yvette
Hans Meyer

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LANGUAGE......FRENCH

SUBTITLES.......NONE

RUNNING TIME.....1 Hour 50 Minutes

PACKAGE: ....French Jacket

PICTURE QUALITY: ....Good.............

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Alain Delon biography: The magnetic Alain Delon was among the most prominent French actors of the postwar era; an exotically handsome performer, he sprung from offscreen rumor and scandal to emerge as a uniquely enigmatic and sinister talent. Born November 8, 1935 in Sceaux, France, Delon spent his formative years primarily in the care of foster parents. He later was sent away to a series of boarding schools, and at the age of 17 he joined the marines, serving as a parachutist in Indo-China. Upon his discharge, Delon returned to Marseilles and struck up a friendship with aspiring actor Jean-Claude Brialy, who invited him to attend the 1957 Cannes Film Festival. There Delon's delicate good looks won him a number of movie offers, including a rumored seven-year deal with David O. Selznick. In the end, he accepted a small role in the Edwige Feuillere film Quand la Femme S'en Mele, followed by an appearance in 1957's Sois Belle Et Tais-Toi.

Delon's first lead role in a picture came opposite Romy Schneider, to whom he was later briefly engaged, in 1958's Christine. A handful of other supporting turns followed before he won the lead in Rene Clement's stylish 1960 thriller Plein Soleil, an international hit which cast him as a murderous American bisexual travelling abroad. In 1960 he appeared in Luchino Visconti's Rocco e i Suoi Fratelli. Under Visconti, he also reunited with Schneider on stage in a production of 'Tis Pity She's a Whore. Next teaming again with Clement, Delon appeared in 1961's Che Gioia Vivere, followed by an appearance with Brigitte Bardot in Les Amours Celebres.

Despite mixed critical regard for his work, Delon was a favorite among many of the era's most prominent filmmakers, and in 1962 he starred in Michelangelo Antonioni's brilliant L'Eclisse. Julien Duvivier's Le Diable et les Dix Commandments followed, as did a turn in Visconti's 1963 masterpiece Il Gattopardo. These many high-profile projects boosted Delon to international prominence, and his next project, 1963's Melodie En Sous-Sol, was a big-budget gangster tale co-starring Jean Gabin. With 1964's Les Felins, he turned to producing as well as performing, later establishing his own company, Adel Productions. With 1966's The Lost Command Delon made his Hollywood debut, followed by Once a Thief, Texas Across the River and Yellow Rolls-Royce. By 1967, however, he was back in France, appearing alongside wife Nathalie Delon in Jean-Pierre Melville's cult classic Le Samourai -- a role which defined the self-absorbed loner persona he continued to develop over subsequent performances -- and with Marianne Faithfull in The Girl on a Motorcycle a year later.

In 1969 Delon and his wife found themselves at the center of a massive scandal when their bodyguard was found shot to death, his body left in a garbage dump. The subsequent investigation into his killing threatened to implicate many of France's most prominent celebrities and politicians in a sordid web of murder, drugs and sex. Many predicted the demise of Delon's career, but he spun the tabloid headlines to his favor. In the eyes of many filmgoers, his myriad portrayals of gangsters, killers and sexual deviants suddenly took on new reality in light of the similar exploits he experienced in his off-screen life, and a notorious television interview in which he admitted to past homosexual liaisons -- as well as many other seamy adventures -- tantalized audiences even more. In the wake of the controversy, Delon starred in four consecutive gangster films -- Jean Herman's Jeff, Henri Verneuil's Le Clan des Siciliens, Jacques Deray's Borsalino (with Jean-Paul Belmondo) and Melville's Le Cercle Rouge -- all them hugely successful with European audiences; Hollywood fame continued to elude him, however, and English-language efforts like 1973's Scorpio failed to attract audiences.

Nevertheless, Delon spent much of the 1970s as France's biggest star. Monsieur Klein(1976), directed by Joseph Losey, won a Cesar as the year's best picture, and thrillers like 1977's Comme Un Boomerang and Le Gang continued to perform extremely well at the box office. In 1979 he again tried to penetrate the American market in the star-studded Airport '79: Concord, but, as before, he returned home without success. In 1981 Delon turned to directing with Pour la Peau d'un Flic, which he followed two years later with Le Battant. In 1984 he co-starred in Volker Schlöndorff's Un Amour de Swann, the most prestigious project he had graced in well over a decade. That same year he garnered a Cesar for his work in Notre Histoire, and in 1985 Parole de Flic became another major hit. Following miserable reviews and receipts for 1986's Le Passage, however, Delon's prolific shooting schedule began to taper off, and he selected projects with greater discretion. Among those chosen was 1990's Nouvelle Vague, which paired him for the first time with director Jean-Luc Godard. During the 1990s his profile continued to recede from the screen as he focused on various business ventures, and he did not reappear before the camera prior to 1994's L' Ours en Peluche. After a cameo in Agnes Varda's all-star 1995 production Les Cent et une Nuits de Simon Cinema, he next resurfaced in 1997's Le Jour et la Nuit.

147 ... Les aventuriers (1967)....ALAIN DELON Joanna Shimkus

Delon...1967 AVENTURIERS Shimkus...5,200...(MatinBisouPublic)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gu9HL9TMpj8
Uploaded by matinbisou on Apr 18, 2010

Delon...1967 Film LES AVENTURIERS...74...(MontrealCollectionPrivate

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