Geneviève Page
10 titles
Filmography
10 results

Michael Strogoff
(1956)In 19th century Russia, a Tartar rebellion led by Feofar Khan separates Russia from Siberia where the Tsar's brother and his troops are making a last stand. The Tsar entrusts Captain Michel Strogoff to deliver a vital message to them.

Foreign Intrigue
(1956)An American press agent places himself in mortal danger while traveling Europe investigating the recent death of a multimillionaire who accumulated his wealth by blackmailing WWII criminals and Nazi collaborators.

The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes
(1970)Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson accept a strange investigation of a missing man that takes them to Scotland and the Loch Ness monster.

The Day and the Hour
(1963)International screen icon Simone Signoret stars in this powerful World War II drama directed by René Clément. Signoret is superb as Thérèse, an isolated woman who unwittingly gets involved in the Resistance when British and American planes are shot down over Nazi-occupied France. She reluctantly agrees to smuggle the pilots into neutral Spain, and along the way finds herself falling in love.

Song Without End
(1960)After his relationship with a countess, Hungarian pianist Franz Liszt conducts a scandalous, 40-year love affair with the wife of the Russian czar.
Youngblood Hawke
(1964)Herman Wouk's bestseller about a Kentucky-born writer's spectacular rise and fall among the big-city glitterati gets the big-screen treatment courtesy of Warner Bros. master of melodrama Delmer Daves. Daves, fresh from a string of successes, recruited celebrated and storied composer Max Steiner to score the film, adding gravitas to the glitz. James Franciscus stars as the title character, a truck driver who arrives in New York City intent on making it as a writer. Aided by a friendly editor, Jeanne Green (Suzanne Pleshette), Hawke's star is on the rise, both among the intelligentsia and the jet set. Hawke inevitably succumbs to the lures of high society, breaking Jeanne's heart and eventually seeing his career destroyed by the jealous husband of one of his paramours.

Belle de Jour
(1967)The bored wife of a wealthy doctor spends her afternoons exploring exciting escapades as a call-girl in a chic Paris brothel.

Buffet Froid
(1979)Three men—an unemployed young man, a police chief-inspector, and a killer—are thrown into a series of events in a surrealist world.

Deadly Circuit
(1983)Isabelle Adjani stars in this dark Euro-noir thriller as a femme fatale serial killer pursued by a detective who believes she's his daughter.

Fan-Fan the Tulip
(1952)Legendary French star Gérard Philipe swashbuckled his way into film history as the peasant soldier Fanfan in Christian-Jaque’s devil-may-care romantic action-comedy. In eighteenth-century France, Fanfan joins King Louis XV’s army to avoid a forced marriage to a local lass and gets himself into close scrapes and tight squeezes with Gina Lollobrigida’s impostor fortune-teller, Adeline, on his way to fighting in the Seven Years’ War. Filled to the brim with dazzling stunts and randy innuendo, FANFAN LA TULIPE, which won the best director prize at Cannes and was a smash hit upon its initial release, remains one of France’s all-time most beloved films.