The Wives of Roger Vadim: Bardot, Deneuve, Fonda
Throwback to when French director Roger Vadim wrote a book just to exploit and put his ex-wives and baby mamas on blast.
Catherine Deneuve and Roger Vadim with Brigitte Bardot and Sami Frey.
Bardot, Deneuve, and Vadim behind the scenes of Vadim's Please Not Now, 1961.
On the set of Please Not Now with Bardot, 1961.
With Bardot, 1956.
With second wife Annette Stroyberg in 1958.
With Deneuve, 1962.
Directing Fonda on the set of La Ronde, 1963.
Costar Catherine Spaak later told the New York Times in June of 1966 that Vadim was so focused on Fonda during the making of the film that "everyone suffered."
With Fonda at home in France, 1960s.
With Bardot at home, 1956.
Vadim's first marriage to Fonda, his third wife, was in 1965 in Las Vegas. Realizing the marriage was not legal in France, the pair quickly remarried in Paris the same year.
Vadim and Bardot on the set of their film Love on a Pillow, 1962.
Vadim visiting Fonda on the set of Cat Ballou, 1964.
Deneuve and Vadim on the set of Le Vice et la Vertu, 1963.
Jane with daughter Vanessa Vadim in Malibu, 1968.
Vadim celebrates daughter Vanessa and ex-wife Brigitte's birthdays, September 28, 1970-something.
Jane with her stepchildren Natalie Vadim (via Annette Stroyberg) and Christian Vadim (via Catherine Deneuve), 1966.
Fonda with Vadim, her mother-in-law, and her two stepchildren, 1967.
Catherine Deneuve with son Christian Vadim, 1963.
Jane and Roger with daughter Vanessa Vadim, 1968.
Vadim with his three children: Vanessa (b. 1968), Christian (b. 1963), and Natalie (b. 1957).
Roger Vadim's five ex-wives at his funeral in St. Tropez: Bridget Bardot, Annette Stroyberg, Jane Fonda, Catherine Schneider, and Marie-Christine Barrault, 2000.
The man definitely had a type.
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Octobre MMXXII
Films
Les Acteurs (1999) de Bertrand Blier avec André Dussollier, Jacques François, Sami Frey, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Michel Piccoli, Claude Rich et Josiane Balasko
Histoire vraie (1973) de Claude Santelli avec Pierre Mondy, Marie-Christine Barrault, Denise Gence, Claude Brosset, Isabelle Huppert et Danielle Chinsky
Le Passager de la pluie (1970) de René Clément avec Marlène Jobert, Charles Bronson, Annie Cordy, Jill Ireland, Ellen Bahl et Steve Eckhardt
Les hommes préfèrent les blondes (Gentlemen Prefer Blondes) (1953) de Howard Hawks avec Jane Russell, Marilyn Monroe, Charles Coburn, Tommy Noonan et Elliott Reid
De l'or en barres (The Lavender Hill Mob) (1951) de Charles Crichton avec Alec Guinness, Stanley Holloway, Sydney James, Alfie Bass, Marjorie Fielding et Audrey Hepburn
La Gueule de l'autre (1979) de Pierre Tchernia avec Michel Serrault, Andréa Parisy, Jean Poiret, Bernadette Lafont, Curd Jügen, Roger Carel et Georges Géret
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) de Don Siegel avec Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, King Donovan, Carolyn Jones et Larry Gates
Simone, le voyage du siècle (2022) d'Olivier Dahan avec Elsa Zylberstein, Rebecca Marder, Élodie Bouchez, Judith Chemla, Olivier Gourmet, Mathieu Spinosi et Sylvie Testud
Adieu l'ami (1968) de Jean Herman avec Alain Delon, Charles Bronson, Olga Georges-Picot, Brigitte Fossey, Bernard Fresson et Jean-Claude Balard
Itinéraire d'un enfant gâté (1988) de Claude Lelouch avec Jean-Paul Belmondo, Richard Anconina, Marie-Sophie L., Jean-Philippe Chatrier, Lio, Daniel Gélin et Béatrice Agenin
Joyeuses Pâques (1984) de Georges Lautner avec Jean-Paul Belmondo, Sophie Marceau, Marie Laforêt, Rosy Varte et Michel Beaune
À bout portant (The Killers) (1964) de Don Siegel avec Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, John Cassavetes, Clu Gulager, Claude Akins, Norman Fell et Ronald Reagan
Détective Conan : Le Gratte-Ciel infernal (Meitantei Konan: Tokei shikake no matenrō) (1997) de Kenji Kodama avec Claudine Grémy, Philippe Valmont, Nayeli Forest, Gérard Malabat et Cyrille Monge
Les Guignols de l'info : La Fiction (1999) de Bruno Le Jean avec Yves Lecoq, Daniel Herzog, Sandrine Alexi, Nicolas Canteloup, Joël Demarty et François Jerosme
Les Trois Jours du Condor (Three Days of the Condor) (1975) de Sydney Pollack avec Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway, Cliff Robertson, Max von Sydow, John Houseman et Addison Powell
Le Bruit des glaçons (2010) de Bertrand Blier avec Jean Dujardin, Albert Dupontel, Anne Alvaro, Myriam Boyer, Christa Theret et Audrey Dana
Burn After Reading (2008) de Joel et Ethan Coen avec George Clooney, Frances McDormand, Brad Pitt, John Malkovich, Tilda Swinton et Richard Jenkins
Antoinette dans les Cévennes (2020) de Caroline Vignal avec Laure Calamy, Benjamin Lavernhe, Olivia Côte, Louise Vidal, Marc Fraize, Jean-Pierre Martins et Lucia Sanchez
La Soif du mal (Touch of Evil) (1998) d'Orson Welles avec Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Orson Welles, Akim Tamiroff, Joseph Calleia et Marlene Dietrich
Cinema Paradiso (Nuovo Cinema Paradiso) (1988) de Giuseppe Tornatore avec Philippe Noiret, Salvatore Cascio, Marco Leonardi, Jacques Perrin et Leopoldo Trieste
Séries
Doctor Who Series 13
Survivants du flux - Les conquérants - The Power Of The Doctor
Le Coffre à Catch
#84 : Chavo et CM Punk c'est la bagarre!! - #85 : Kelly Kelly fait du bon catch : Info ou Intox? - #86 : Le Nature Boy de passage à la ECW ! - #87 : Le meilleur Triple Threat de la ECW ?
Affaires sensibles
Qui a peur de Belphégor ? - 1984, George Orwell - Épisode 1/2 : L'affaire Dreyfus : au fond de la corbeille - Épisode 2/2 : L'affaire Dreyfus : l'innocent le plus célèbre de France - Farewell : l'espion qui a fait basculer la guerre froide - L'OVNI de Roswell et le mystère de la Zone 51 - L'Exorciste de William Friedkin, Belzébuth superstar - Le fantôme du château de Veauce
Graffiti 80
Le premier salon du changement (1981-1983) - Coulez le Rainbow Warrior (1984-1985) - Touche pas à mon poste (1986-1987) - A l'Est du nouveau (1988-1989)
Rex, Chien Flic Saison 5, 6, 7, 8
Le testament - Secrets fatals - Sissi - Série noire - Le secret des cartes - Le brésilien - Le faux coupable - Le cheval qui valait des millions - Plein gaz - Clichés tragiques - Héritage empoisonné - Mauvaises actions - À la dernière seconde - On n'embrasse pas les policiers - Et la mort frappa deux fois - Le petit chien - Hold-up - Œil pour œil - Les cachets
Dark Side of The Ring Saison 3
Le Procès des stéroïdes
Brooklyn Nine Nine Saison 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Halloween - Halloween II - Halloween III - Halloween IV - Halloween V
Spectacles
L'Exoconférence (2014) d'Alexandre Astier
Livres
Des rives humaines de Delphine Evano
Bilbo le Hobbit de J.R.R. Tolkien
(III) et tes soupirs entre les draps de Celle qui aimait
Kaamelott Tome 8 : L'antre du Basilic de Alexandre Astier et Steven Dupré
Détective Conan : Tome 2 de Gôshô Aoyama
Marvel, les années 2000 : Tome 3 : Black Widow de Scott Hampton et Devin Grayson
Contes et légendes mythologiques de Emile Genest
Hitchcock présente : Histoires angoissantes
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Françoise Fabian in My Night at Maud's (Éric Rohmer, 1969)
Cast: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Françoise Fabian, Marie-Christine Barrault, Antoine Vitez, Léonid Kogan, Guy Léger, Anne Dubot. Screenplay: Éric Rohmer. Cinematography: Néstor Almendros. Production design: Nicole Rachline. Film editing: Cécile Decugis.
A moral tale: Once upon a time, a brave and chaste knight saw a fair young lady in church, and wished that she were his. The devil, hearing this, arranged for the knight to be tempted by a beautiful sorceress. But when the knight resisted the carnal temptations of the sorceress, he was rewarded with the love and the hand of the fair young lady. Éric Rohmer's moral tale: Jean-Louis (Jean-Louis Trintignant), an engineer who has recently moved to Clermont-Ferrand, is an intellectual Catholic, determined at the age of 34 to settle down and get married after several failed love affairs. At mass one day he sees a beautiful young woman (Marie-Christine Barrault), and longs to get to know her. Leaving the church, he sees the woman get on a moped, and he follows her in his car until they are separated by traffic. Jean-Louis runs into an old friend, Vidal (Antoine Vitez), a philosophy professor and a Marxist, who takes him to see his friend, Maud (Françoise Fabian), a divorcee. Vidal gets drunk and leaves early, and when it begins to snow heavily, Jean-Louis stays to spend the night with Maud. But they do little more than talk -- about his Catholicism, about the philosophy of Pascal, about his life and hers. She and her husband were unfaithful to each other, and her lover was killed when his car skidded on the ice -- one reason she forbids Jean-Louis to drive in the snow. They literally sleep together: She in the nude, he fully clothed and wrapped in a coverlet she lends him, though both are in the same bed. In the morning he makes a pass at her that she brushes off, and as he looks out the window he sees the young woman he saw at mass, and runs out to introduce himself to her. Her name is Françoise, and she is a student at the university where Vidal teaches. They make a date for later in the day, and afterward he drives her home to her student apartment. Stuck in the snow again, he spends the night, but not in her room: She gives him a key to the apartment of another student who is away. Five years later, they are married and taking their young son to the beach, when they meet Maud on the path. Jean-Louis realizes from Françoise's reaction that she knows Maud -- in fact, Françoise, who has confessed that she had an affair with a married man, may have been the lover of Maud's husband. This is the third of Rohmer's "Six Moral Tales," and perhaps the most successful: It was nominated for Oscars for Rohmer's screenplay and as the best foreign-language film. But a lot of critics and viewers found it insufferably talky in that peculiarly French over-intellectualized way -- a curious objection to a film that features four attractive actors and a strong emphasis on sex. And the talk is far wittier than anything you're likely to hear in a movie today.
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