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Back Streets of Paris

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(Redirected from Macadam (1946 film))

Back Streets of Paris
Original release poster
Directed byJacques Feyder
Marcel Blistène
(finished)
Written byJacques Viot
(scenario, adapatation. dialogue)
Produced byEugène Tucherer
Starring
CinematographyLouis Page
Edited byIsabelle Elman
Music byJean Wiener
Production
company
B.U.P. Française
Distributed byRégina
Release date
  • 27 November 1946 (1946-11-27) (France)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Back Streets of Paris (French: Macadam) is a 1946 French crime film directed by Marcel Blistène. Jacques Feyder also contributed to the film in the role of artistic director.

Plot

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This story involves Madame Rose, a hotelkeeper in a Paris suburb who will stop at nothing, including murder. Other characters include one of her former accomplices who carries a suitcase full of cash, a kindhearted street vendor, the gangster's mistress, and the landlady's daughter, Simone, who dreams of a better life.

Cast

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Production

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Filming took place between June and August 1946 at the Studios de Saint-Maurice, with exterior scenes filmed at the Zoo de Vincennes. Jean d'Eaubonne was the set designer.[1]

Jacques Feyder is credited as artistic director ("direction artistique"). Although Feyder was ill at the time, according to Françoise Rosay (his wife) he was asked to supervise filming because various members of the crew had no confidence in the young and inexperienced director, Marcel Blistène. Relations on the set between Blistène and Feyder were hostile, and once filming was finished it was Feyder who oversaw the editing.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Jacques Feyder, sous la direction de Jan A. Gili et Michel Marie. Paris: Association française de recherche sur l'histoire du cinéma, 1998. pp. 249–250. (1895, numéro hors série, octobre 1998).
  2. ^ Françoise Rosay, La Traversée d'une vie. Paris: Robert Laffont, 1974. pp. 293–296.
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