Manon 70

Manon 70 is a 1968 French (French-Italian-German co-production) drama film directed by Jean Aurel and starring Catherine Deneuve, Jean-Claude Brialy and Sammy Frey. It was written by Aurel with Cécil Saint-Laurent. The story is loosely based on Manon Lescaut, an 18th-century French novel by Antoine François Prévost. The original music was composed by Serge Gainsbourg.

Manon 7867896500
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJean Aurel
Produced byRobert Dorfmann
Screenplay byJean Aurel
Cécil Saint-Laurent
Based onManon Lescaut
by Abbe Prevost
StarringCatherine Deneuve
Jean-Claude Brialy
Sami Frey
Elsa Martinelli
Robert Webber
Music bySerge Gainsbourg original
Antonio Vivaldi non-original
CinematographyEdmond Richard
Edited byAnne-Marie Cotret
Production
company
Les Films Corona
Transinter Films (Paris)
Roxy Films (Munich)
Panda Films (Rome)
Distributed byValoria Films
Release date
  • 21 February 1968 (1968-02-21) (France)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryFrance
Italy
Germany
LanguageFrench
Box office$3,253,380[1]

Synopsis

Manon (Catherine Deneuve) is an amoral, free spirit who uses sex to surround herself in relatively luxurious surroundings. Journalist François (Sami Frey) sees her at the airport and falls in love with her. Once they land in Paris, he makes his move and steals her from the man she's been traveling with. François and Manon fall in love but Manon's brother (Jean-Claude Brialy), wants to live off his sister and causes trouble. Manon tries seeing a wealthy man (Robert Webber) at the same time as Francois.

Cast

Reception

Deneuve later said she wanted to work with Jean Aurel because she like his film In Love. Of Manon 70 she said "the story was great but the film just missed.... it's probably because the director was not at his best."[2]

References


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