| The Eleven O'Clock Woman | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Directed by | Jean Devaivre | 
| Written by | Jean-Paul Le Chanois | 
| Based on | The Eleven O'Clock Woman by Pierre Apestéguy | 
| Produced by | Jean Devaivre Robert Sussfeld | 
| Starring | Paul Meurisse Micheline Francey Pierre Renoir | 
| Cinematography | René Gaveau | 
| Edited by | Louis Devaivre | 
| Music by | Joseph Kosma | 
| Production company | Les Films Neptune | 
| Distributed by | Sirius Films | 
| Release date | 
 | 
| Running time | 97 minutes | 
| Country | France | 
| Language | French | 
The Eleven O'Clock Woman (French: La dame d'onze heures) is a 1948 French mystery thriller film directed by Jean Devaivre and starring Paul Meurisse, Micheline Francey, Gilbert Gil and Pierre Renoir.[1] It is based on the 1938 novel of the same title by Pierre Apestéguy.[2] It was shot at the François 1er Studios in Paris and on location around the city. The film's sets were designed by the art director Robert Hubert.
Synopsis
Stanislas, a young explorer recently back from Africa, goes to visit the Pescara family. When a murder takes place he sets out as an amateur detective to solve the crime.
Cast
- Paul Meurisse as Stanislas-Octave Seminario dit 'SOS'
- Micheline Francey as Muriel Pescara
- Gilbert Gil as Charles Pescara
- Pierre Renoir as Le docteur Gérard Pescara
- Jean Tissier as Guillaume
- Jean Brochard as Le juge d'instruction
- Pierre-Louis as Paul Wantz dit Delbecq
- Junie Astor as Hélène Tassin - l'infirmière
- Jean Debucourt as Le docteur Vermeulen
- Mady Berry as Brigitte Tassin
- Pierre Palau as Le portier
- Arthur Devère as L'éclusier
- Marcel Pérès as Le cantonnier
- Jean Sinoël as Le jardinier
- Georges Bever as Baptiste - le greffier
- Madeleine Suffel as La patronne de l'hôtel
- Michel Seldow as Le prestidigitateur Pablo
References
Bibliography
- Bessy, Maurice & Chirat, Raymond. Histoire du cinéma français: encyclopédie des films, 1940–1950. Pygmalion, 1986
- Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
- Rège, Philippe. Encyclopedia of French Film Directors, Volume 1. Scarecrow Press, 2009.
External links
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