Alain Delon
30 titles
Filmography
30 results

Le Samouraï
(1967)A dedicated professional killer lies fully clothed in his apartment, then goes off to a day at the office.

Rocco and His Brothers
(1960)Five brothers move north with their mother to Milan, finding fame in the boxing ring and love in the same woman. Labeled by Scorsese as “one of the most sumptuous black-and-white pictures,” this is a timeless story of modernity, class tension, and family drama by director Luchino Visconti and staring Alain Delon.

Joy House
(1964)A scorching love triangle ignites between the iconic Jane Fonda , sultry Lola Albright and Alain Delon in René Clément’s "Joy House." Delon stars as Marc, a dashing young con man on the run from the mob. After seeking refuge in the Riviera villa of the widowed Barbara and her curvaceous cousin, Melinda, Marc becomes trapped in the passionate snares of both women, who are full of sinister surprises

L'Eclisse
(1962)L'Eclisse was the final film in Antonioni's informal trilogy on contemporary malaise (following L'Avventuraand La Notte), a series of films that redefined the concept of narrative cinema.

Purple Noon
(1960)Alain Delon (Le Cercle Rouge, Le Samouraï) stars as Tom Ripley, an American who travels to Europe on an all-expenses-paid mission to convince his friend, the charismatic playboy Philippe Greenleaf (Maurice Ronet - Le Feu Follet), to travel to San Francisco at the request of the wealthy Greenleaf family.

Death of a Corrupt Man
(1977)Serrano, a virtuoso at the art of blackmail, is dead. Plenty of people with skeletons in their closets are happy about it and Xavier Maréchal wouldn't exactly be upset either if it weren't for his friend Philippe admitting that he committed the murder. Indeed, Serrano's death was not an accident.

Flic Story
(1975)A French detective must capture Emile Buisson, a thief and cold-blooded murderer, after he escapes from prison in 1947.

The Swimming Pool
(1969)A couple basking by their poolside retreat are visited by the girlfriend's old friend and his teenage daughter -- and the consequences are deadly.

A Cop
(1972)In this film noir, acclaimed director Jean-Pierre Melville's final film, a Paris police chief (ALAIN DELON) discovers that his nightclub owner friend (RICHARD CRENNA) also leads a group of bank robbers. When he's tipped off that the same robbers are planning a drug heist, the police chief races to defeat his two-faced friend. Meanwhile, the police chief has engaged in some double-crossing himself - by sharing the same woman (CATHERINE DENEUVE) with the man he calls his friend.

Farewell, Friend
(1968)After an overseas deployment, two former French Foreign Legion members plan to break into the vault of a corporation and recover some bearer bonds.

The Burned Barns
(1973)Two titans of French Cinema are brought together for this crime drama set in the snow-covered French countryside on the border with Switzerland. The body of a young woman is found savagely murdered near the isolated Burned Barns farm run by Rose (Oscar-winner Simone Signoret) and her family. The police work begins and the investigating judge, Pierre Larcher (Alain Delon), soon comes to suspect Rose’s family, and in particular her sons, may have played a role. Signoret and Delon are outstanding as two forces playing a game of wits with profound consequences. Featuring a stunning soundtrack by electronic music pioneer Jean-Michel Jarre.

Tony Arzenta
(1973)When a contract killer for the mob is brutally punished for trying to leave the game, he sets out on a revenge mission against his former bosses.

Once a Thief
(1965)Starring Ann-Margret and Jack Palance, this crime melodrama follows young Eddie Pedak, an ex-convict trying to go straight. Eddie gets a steady job and tries to support his wife and daughter, but he is hounded by police detectives, one of whom is convinced Eddie shot him. To make matters worse, Eddie nearly goes back to prison after his brother shows up and tries to get him involved in one last heist.

Zorro
(1975)In this adaptation of the classic masked avenger, Zorro is the secret identity of a governor fighting for justice alongside a monk and an aristocrat.

Mr. Klein
(1976)Paris, January 1942 - art dealer Robert Klein is making a killing. For this loyal Frenchman the Nazi occupation is a unique business opportunity.

Borsalino and Co.
(1974)Marseille. Heaps of flowers and funeral wreaths... "A man who no longer defends his colors is no longer a man."

Three Men to Kill
(1980)In this gritty, violent, and suspenseful thriller, Alain Delon plays Gerfaut who comes to the aid of a man laying wounded in the road, not knowing that the man has taken two bullets to the belly. Soon he becomes the target for the killers who see him as a dangerous witness. But Gerfaut has been around the block a couple of times and he won't be so easily eliminated.

The Gang
(1977)Cohen Film Collection introduces this French classic. In 1945, as World War Two comes to a close, five small time crooks unite to form a gang. After several bold robberies they become notorious as "the front-wheel drive gang". The police attempt to stop their crime spree with little success, but how long will their luck last?

Any Number Can Win
(1963)
Borsalino
(1970)Two Marseilles hoodlums, Capella (Jean-Paul Belmondo) and Siffredi (Alain Delon), blast their way to the top of the Marseilles underworld in the 1930s until one of them decides his girl is more important than crime.