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Day for Night (1973) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Neil LaBute on DAY FOR NIGHT
Cast

Jacqueline Bisset
Julie Baker

Valentina Cortese
Séverine

Dani
Liliane, the Trainee Script Girl

Alexandra Stewart
Stacey

Jean-Pierre Aumont
Alexandre

Jean Champion
Bertrand, the Producer

Jean-Pierre Léaud
Alphonse

François Truffaut
Ferrand, the Director

Niké Arrighi
Odile, the Makeup Artist

Nathalie Baye
Joelle, the Script Girl

Maurice Seveno
TV Reporter

Bernard Ménez
Bernard, the Property Master

Xavier Saint-Macary
Christian

Jean-François Stévenin
Jean-François, the Assistant Director

Martine Barraqué
Martine, the Editor (uncredited)

Marcel Berbert
French Insurer (uncredited)

Yann Dedet
Yann, the Editor (uncredited)

Georges Delerue
Georges, the Composer (narration) (uncredited)

Graham Greene
English Insurer (uncredited)

Ernest Menzer
Producer of Erotic Films (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
It's quite hard to succinctly review this Truffaut comedy - there is just so much going on. Essentially, Jacqueline Bisset ("Julie") is brought to Nice to star in a movie about a British woman who is married to a Frenchman. She comes to meet his family and promptly falls in love with her husband's father and so leaves him to shack up with his dad. It turns out, as the production progresses that the producer "Bertrand" (Jean Champion) and the director "Ferrand" (Truffaut himself) have to deal with an whole gamut of issues as the cast - all assembled in a small hotel - come with more baggage than the Queen Mary. "Julie" is recovering from a failed marriage and a nervous breakdown; "Séverine" (Valentina Cortese) is having an affair - but with a bottle, and Jean-Pierre Léaud steals the film as the petulant and high-maintenance "Alphonse". It reminded me a little of Fellini's "8½" from ten years earlier, another behind the scenes as a movie is made story - but it could hardly be more different. Here, the cast and the crew could not have been more dysfunctional - a trait of the creative, I believe - but in the end somehow or other there is a chance the film might actually get made! It is good fun, and the odd contribution from Jean-Pierre Aumont help keep this 2 hour extravaganza moving along entertainingly. Georges Delerue's jaunty score compliments the lovely open-ness of this production, and I really enjoyed this film.
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