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  1. 28 de sept. de 2011 · Henri-Georges Clouzot's razor-sharp thriller remains a dark classic of misanthropic invention. Taut as a mantrap, the meticulous script provides plenty of te...

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  2. 20 de mar. de 2011 · Les diaboliques – review. B etween 1942 and 1960 Clouzot directed several of the best thrillers ever made, including Le corbeau, Quai des Orfèvres, The Wages of Fear and this one, made in 1955 ...

  3. Les Diaboliques by LES DIABOLIQUES with Irène Schweizer, Maggie Nicols and Joelle Leandre, released 01 January 1994 1. Oh My Darling 2. Come Along, Charles 3. Le petit macabre 4. L'après midi d'une phantaisie 5. Hotel Modern 6. Free Or Fated 7. The Cheek Of The Devil 8. Come Into My Office 9. Valse diabolique 10. Mme Dubois' tragédie 11.

  4. In this classic of French suspense, the cruel and abusive headmaster of a boarding school, Michel Delassalle (Paul Meurisse), becomes the target of a murder plot hatched by an unlikely duo - his meek wife (Vera Clouzot) and the mistress he brazenly flaunts (Simone Signoret). The women, brought together by their mutual hatred for the man, pull ...

  5. Henri-Georges Clouzot. One of the few contemporaries of Hitchcock who gave the Master of Suspense a run for his money, Henri-Georges Clouzot dealt in misanthropic, black-humored tales of greed, jealousy, murder, immorality, and revenge. Though perhaps best known for 1955’s Gothic noir Diabolique, one of the most influential thrillers of all ...

  6. Movie Clip. Conspiring murderess teachers Christina (Vera Clouzot) and Nicole (Simone Signoret) are maneuvering to get the school pool drained, in order to advance their plot, in Henri-Georges Clouzot's , 1955. The body is in the van, as Nicole (Simone Signoret) buys gas and Christina (Vera Clouzot) parries a drunken soldier (Jean Brochard) in ...

  7. www.bfi.org.uk › film › 93e2f8e4-a6c8/5018/8ef1Les Diaboliques (1955) | BFI

    29 de sept. de 2023 · Les Diaboliques (1955) “It’s extraordinary how well it manipulates the audience, one moment stimulating our base desires, the next twisting our expectations into knots.” Wally Hammond, Time Out, 1995 Based on a novel by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac – whose work would later provide the basis for Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958) – Les Diaboliques is among the darkest of French thrillers.