Jump to content

The Blue Villa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Un bruit qui rend fou)
Un bruit qui rend fou
Directed byDimitri de Clercq (Credited as Dimitri Duclerq).
Written byAlain Robbe-Grillet (Scenario and dialogue).
Produced byJaques de Clercq
Domenique Fobe
Gerard Ruey
Jerome Paillard
Stephen Beckner
Jaqueline Pierreux
StarringFred Ward
Arielle Dombasle
Sandrine Le Berre
Charles Tordjman
Dimitris Poulikakos
Michalis Maniatis
Christian Maillet
Distributed byNomad Films
Release date
  • 17 February 1995 (1995-02-17) (Berlin International Film Festival)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget2,700,000 BEF (= 600,000 $)

The Blue Villa (French title: Un bruit qui rend fou, A noise that renders one crazy or A maddening noise) is a 1995 French crime thriller film, with a scenario and dialogue by Alain Robbe-Grillet, direction credits going to Dimiti Duclerq, and production credits attributed to Jean Duclerq. The film stars Fred Ward and Arielle Dombasle. It was entered into the 45th Berlin International Film Festival.[1]

Plot

[edit]

Living on an isolated Greek island are a few native Greeks; several Chinese who spend their days playing mahjong; Nordmann, a boozy screenwriter; and seductive Sarah la-Blonde, the madam at the Blue Villa, the town whorehouse, in which Sarah hides Santa, alias Lotus Blossom. Sarah is teaching Santa to sing an aria from Wagner. One day, Frank arrives on the island. At first, he does not speak and appears to be looking for something or someone. It is later learned that he was involved in the supposed death of Santa, who just might be Nordmann's daughter. It is up to the local police chief, Thieu, to figure out what parts of the story are true and what parts are fiction.

Cast

[edit]
  • Fred Ward - Frank
  • Arielle Dombasle - Sarah la-Blonde
  • Charles Tordjman - Edouard 'Nord' Nordmann
  • Sandrine Le Berre - Santa
  • Dimitris Poulikakos - Police chief Thieu
  • Christian Maillet - The father
  • Muriel Jacobs - Kim
  • Michalis Maniatis - Mars

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Berlinale: 1995 Programme". berlinale.de. Retrieved 2012-01-01.

References

[edit]