Alexander and the Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Road Trip 2025 - Movies (Mar 28th)
Bring Them Down 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Love Hurts 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Sex-Positive 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Flight Risk 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Holland 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
The House Was Not Hungry Then 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
One Million Babes BC 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Through the Door 2024 - Movies (Mar 27th)
Snow White 2025 - Movies (Mar 27th)
England’s Lions The New Generation 2025 - Movies (Mar 26th)
The Last Keeper 2024 - Movies (Mar 26th)
The Brutalist 2024 - Movies (Mar 25th)
Mufasa The Lion King 2024 - Movies (Mar 25th)
The Monkey 2025 - Movies (Mar 25th)
The World According to Allee Willis 2024 - Movies (Mar 25th)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
- (Jan 1st)
The Chase Australia - (Mar 28th)
The One Show - (Mar 28th)
Beyond the Gates - (Mar 28th)
When Life Gives You Tangerines - (Mar 28th)
Farmer Wants a Wife - (Mar 28th)
Teen Mom- The Next Chapter - (Mar 28th)
A Decent Man - (Mar 28th)
Know Where to Hide - Wie niet weg is… - (Mar 28th)
Next Level Chef - (Mar 28th)
When No One Sees Us - (Mar 28th)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Mar 28th)
TNA iMPACT - (Mar 28th)
Doctor Odyssey - (Mar 28th)
Bang Rak Soi 9/1 - (Mar 28th)
Yellowjackets - (Mar 28th)
Power Book III- Raising Kanan - (Mar 28th)
The Trades - (Mar 28th)
The Rachel Maddow Show - (Mar 28th)
Gardening Australia - (Mar 28th)
Tonight - (Mar 28th)
**Behind the Facade (1939)** A crime has been committed in a very respectable Parisian apartment building... Which of the tenants is the murderer? A shocking investigation for a series of sketches. It also features a fabulous cast of stars from the 1930s/1940s: Jules Berry, Michel Simon, Erich Von Stroheim, Elvire Popesco, Carette, Gaby Morlay, Simone Berriau... Lucien Baroux as Commissaire Boucheron, a policeman from the Quariter, who investigates the murder of a building's owner, and Jacques Baumer as Inspector Lambert, from the Sûreté, a more prestigious service than the local police station... _Behind the Facade_ is undoubtedly one of the most up-to-date and revealing films of the immediate pre-war period, of which Yves Mirande was one of the princes: a man of the theater, a man of wit and a man of the salon, he, like Sacha Guitry, enjoyed every success. His plays triumphed on the boulevard, several were adapted for the screen, he wrote screenplays and dialogues, and sometimes tried his hand at directing. In 1938, he had conceived and directed the excellent _Café de Paris_ (also directed by Georges Lacombe). A crime film set in this Parisian hot spot on New Year's Eve. Perfectly respecting the classic three-unit rule, it featured a police investigation following the murder of a press magnate. The customers present at the time of the crime, forced to remain on the premises, were successively interrogated, a convenient pretext for the appearance of Mirande's star friends, one after the other and for a few minutes at a time. Jules Berry, Véra Korène, Pierre Brasseur, Simone Berriau, etc. _Café de Paris_ was a great success on release: the producers and the Régina company immediately asked Yves Mirande to undertake another work based on the same principle: Derrière la Façade, also technically supervised by Georges Lacombe, was even more brilliantly performed: like Guitry, Mirande loved actors, and knew how to make them love him. The plot is almost the same as in _Café de Paris_, only the location has changed: this time, the crime is committed in a tenement building, and it's the residents who two rival policemen will try to get to talk to each other in order to uncover the murderer of one of the tenants. Again, a pretext for sketches, but of constant interest: the film is certainly well made, and we have fun recognizing the faces, and there are many of them. Almost all of them are pre-war greats, but through them, Mirande shows the whole of self-satisfied, egotistical society, with its prejudices and pettiness. As is often the case with fashionable people, Yves Mirande is perfectly placed to be aware of the imperfections of the community in which he lives; if we can't suspect him of having wanted to stigmatize, let alone awaken, the fact remains that he showed here an astonishing, undoubtedly unconscious lucidity. If society is the place where the human comedy is played out, the boulevard, theater or cinema, is its microcosm. It's no coincidence, for instance, that Erich Von Stroheim's character is featured in _Behind the Facade_: a German, or more generally an arrogant foreigner, recently naturalized as a French citizen, who shamelessly rips off "real" citizens, is responsible for the stagnation Mirande senses, and whom the film singles out for popular vindication. Obscure feelings, muted anxieties: images of a decomposed France, soon to be brought down by a conflict it dreads but dares not confront. It's the France of Munich on parade, with comedy ministers and bourgeois, cocottes and stuffy aristocrats, in a ballet that closely resembles a dance of death.