Movies Starring Ad Xe8 Le Exarchopoulos
Total movies found: 2, viewing from 1 to 2
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Chez Gino
[ 2011, France ] starting from $1.99Genres: Comedy
Actors: José Garcia, Anna Mouglalis, Samuel Benchetrit, Sergi López, Ben Gazzara, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Martin Jobert, Serge Larivière, Robert Assolen, Fabrice Adde, Mahipal Singh, Prosper Leprégassin, Jules Benchetrit, Catherine Herold, Jalil Lespert, Etienne Mallevaey, Tiago Manaïa
Directors: Samuel Benchetrit
Gino, installed last thirty years in Brussels, held a pizza purchased with the savings of his wife Simone. Her life is shattered by the news of the impending death of his uncle in Italy, a mobster who made millionaire by his illegal activities. A large share of the inheritance was promised to Gino. Only problem, he needs to touch it, prove to his uncle, he is now, as he told her a formidable reigning godfather of all the pizzerias in Paris. Gino command while a director, a documentary about him and his family supposed to pose as gangsters large. Only the shooting does not go quite as planned, the family rebel, the team proves recalcitrant orders Gino who tends to take on his character and when a real mafia, convinced he was dealing with a new competitor comes in, it’s panic.
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La Rafle.
[ 2010, Hungary, Germany, France ] starting from $1.99Paris, 16 juillet 1942, 4 heures du matin... (Paris, 16 July 1942, 4 AM...)
Actors: Jean Reno, Mélanie Laurent, Gad Elmaleh, Raphaëlle Agogué, Hugo Leverdez, Joseph Weismann, Oliver Cywie, Romain Di Concerto, Sylvie Testud, Anne Brochet, Roland Copé, Jean-Michel Noirey, Rebecca Marder, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Catherine Allégret, Thierry Frémont, Jean-Pierre Lorit, Frédéric Moulin, Isabelle Gélinas, Armelle, Caroline Raynaud, Charlotte Driesen, Sandra Moreno, Maurice Vaudaux, Salomé Sebbag, Nastasia Juszczak, Ariane Seguillon, Nadia Barentin, Catherine Hosmalin, Marc Rioufol, Patrick Courtois, Mathilde Snodgrass, Rodolphe Saulnier, Nicolas Bridet, Swann Arlaud, Djamel Mehnane, Alban Aumard, Christian Adam, Nicolas Merlin, Grégory Gatignol, Frank Berjot, Salvatore Ingoglia, Philippe Beautier, Samuel Diot, Gaspard Meier, Anne Benoît, Jérémie Segard, Jonathan Brecher, Francis Weismann, François Bureloup, Sabine Pernette, Christelle Cornil, Aurélien Ringelheim, Samuel Jaudon, Catherine Toublanc, Jonas Hamon, Gabrielle Bonacini, Philippe Mangione, Antoine Stip, Christian Erickson, Michelle Guetta, Johannes Oliver Hamm, Jerome Henry, Udo Schenk, Franziska Schubert, Thomas Darchinger, Bernhard Schütz, Holger Daemgen, János Füzi, Virág Bárány, Gabriella Gubás, Peter Kollar, Geoffry Thomas, Kata Varga, Róbert Bolla, Soma Zámbori, Ádám Földi, Péter Barbinek, Tamás Lengyel, Iván Fenyö, Hanna Becker, Adel Martin, Viktoria Molnar, Szofia Sztepanov, Lora Balogh, Tamás Gábor, Tamás Csaszar, Ilona Kassai, Zsuzsa Száger, Katalin Pap, Csaba Jakab, Virág Sallai, Zoltán Horváth, Barnabás Timon, Aaron Boujenah, Lili Karolyi, Bea Tövispataki, Denis Menochet, Jean-Yves Freyburger, Adolf Hitler, Orsolya Júlia Papp, Barnabás Réti, Istvan Szori
Directors: Rose Bosch
In picturesque Montmarte, three children wearing a yellow star play in the streets, oblivious to the darkness spreading over Nazi-occupied France. Their parents do not seem too concerned either, somehow putting their trust in the Vichy Government. But beyond this view, much is going on. Hitler demands that the French government round up its Jews and put them on trains for the extermination camps in the East. The collaborators start to put the plan into effect and within a short time, 13,000 of Paris’s Jews, among them 4,000 children, will be rounded up and sent on a road with no return. The fateful date: July 16th, 1942, 68 years ago. With a meticulously constructed script based on extensive research and first-hand accounts, writer/director Roselyne Bosch brings to the screen one of the most moving dramas of the year. Powered by fluid direction and a string of stars- from Jean Reno (The Da Vinci Code, Leon: The Professional) to Mélanie Laurent (Inglourious Basterds, The Concert)- La Rafle became a big box-office hit in France in the first half of 2010, and its audiences included thousands of young people who came to learn about a dark chapter in their country’s history.





