Until the Last One
Appearance
(Redirected from Jusqu'au dernier)
Until the Last One | |
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Directed by | Pierre Billon |
Written by | Pierre Billon Michel Audiard |
Based on | Until the Last One by André Duquesne |
Produced by | Edmond Ténoudji |
Starring | Raymond Pellegrin Jeanne Moreau Paul Meurisse |
Cinematography | Pierre Petit |
Edited by | Georges Arnstam |
Music by | Georges Van Parys |
Production companies | Laetitia Film Les Films Marceau |
Distributed by | Les Films Marceau |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Countries |
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Language | French |
Until the Last One (French: Jusqu'au dernier, Italian: Fino all'ultimo) is a 1957 French-Italian thriller film directed by Pierre Billon and starring Raymond Pellegrin, Jeanne Moreau and Paul Meurisse.[1] It was shot at the Photosonor Studios in Paris and on location around the River Somme. The film's sets were designed by the art director Jean d'Eaubonne. A film noir, it attracted around a million and a quarter spectators at the French box office.[2]
Synopsis
[edit]Criminal Fernand Bastia rats on the rest of his gang, betraying them to the police and escaping with the proceeds of the heist. He goes to hide out with a travelling circus where his sister works, but is traced by his former associates.
Cast
[edit]- Raymond Pellegrin as Fernand Bastia
- Jeanne Moreau as Gina
- Paul Meurisse as Fredo Ricioni - le chef de la bande
- Max Révol as Cinquo - le propriétaire du cirque
- Jacqueline Noëlle as Angèle Lombardi
- Jacques Dufilho as Pépé
- Orane Demazis as La mère de Quedchi
- Rita Cadillac as La strip-teaseuse du cirque
- Michèle David as La fille et partenaire de Dario
- Charles Bouillaud as Un gendarme
- Olivier Richard as Le petit garçon au chien
- Mijanou Bardot as Josiane - l'écuyère
- Lila Kedrova as Marcella Bastia
- Howard Vernon as Philippe Dario - le trapéziste
- Marcel Mouloudji as Le forain Quedchi
References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
- Walker-Morrison, Deborah. Classic French Noir: Gender and the Cinema of Fatal Desire. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020.