Marcel Bozzuffi
9 titles
Filmography
9 results

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(1972)A 1972 British psychological horror film written and directed by Robert Altman. The film follows an unstable children's author (Susannah York) who finds herself engulfed in apparitions and hallucinations while staying at her remote holiday home. It all started when she started receiving disturbing phone calls at her home in London, some of which suggesting her husband is having an affair.

La Cage aux Folles II
(1980)Michel Serrault and Ugo Tognazzi return in this zany espionage caper that has the two targeted by murderous enemy agents in an unforgettable cross-country journey.

Love Is a Funny Thing
(1969)A man and a woman from France, both married to other people, fall in love while traveling in the US and embark on a passion-fueled cross-country trip.

Hi-Jack Highway
(1955)After a night with his girlfriend (Jeanne Moreau), a trucker (Jean Gabin) finds a body on the road home and is suspected by the police in this noir gem.

The French Connection
(1971)HD. Gene Hackman stars in this 1971 Best Picture Oscar(R) winner about a maverick cop who stops a huge heroin shipment into New York.

Speaking of Murder
(1957)From acclaimed crime writer Auguste Le Breton comes this gripping noir thriller starring cinema icon Jean Gabin. Louis Bertain’s (Gabin) garage serves as a front for a gang of thieves. He and his accomplices keep up a civic veneer by day and commit crimes in Paris by night. This status quo is upset when one of the gang members becomes convinced that Louis’ younger brother is a police informer.
Le Deuxième Souffle
(1966)With his customary restraint and ruthless attention to detail, director Jean-Pierre Melville follows the parallel tracks of French underworld criminal Gu (the inimitable Lino Ventura), escaped from prison and roped into one last robbery, and the suave inspector, Blot (Paul Meurisse), relentlessly seeking him. The implosive "Le Deuxième Souffle" captures the pathos, loneliness, and excitement of a life in the shadows with methodical suspense and harrowing authenticity, and contains one of the most thrilling heist sequences Melville ever shot.

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.

Contraband
(1980)Luca Di Angelo is an idealistic family man and cigarette smuggler in the treacherous Naples underworld. When a rival gang massacres his brother and abducts his wife, Luca triggers a psychotic mob war.