Fernando Rey as Alain Charnier
French Connection II (1975)
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Fernando Rey as Alain Charnier
French Connection II (1975)

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Fernando Rey-Sara Montiel "Locura de amor" 1948, de Juan de Orduña.
je voulais me donner Ă vous. vous avez voulu m'acheter Ă ma mĂšre. je ne vous reverrai jamais.
cet obscur objet du desir (1979)
Jesus of Nazareth, part 1Â (1977), directed by Franco Zeffirelli.

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That Obscure Object of Desire (Luis Buñuel, 1977)
Fernando Rey in That Obscure Object of DesireÂ
Cast: Fernando Rey, Carole Bouquet, Ăngela Molina, Julien Bertheau, AndrĂ© Weber, MarĂa Asquerino, PiĂ©ral, Michel Piccoli (voice). Screenplay: Luis Buñuel, Jean-Claude CarriĂšre, based on a novel by Pierre LouĂżs. Cinematography: Edmond Richard. Production design: Pierre Guffroy. Film editing: HĂ©lĂšne Plemmianikov.
Iâm not particularly interested in why Luis Buñuel cast two actresses, Carole Bouquet and Angela Molina, in the role of Conchita in That Obscure Object of Desire, or why Mathieu (Fernando Rey) occasionally carries around a burlap sack, or even why the central story, of Mathieuâs efforts to consummate his desire for Conchita, plays out against a background of terrorist attacks. I know that Buñuel and Jean-Claude CarriĂšre toyed with the idea of multiple casting even before the film began with a single actress, Maria Schneider, in the role, and that Carole Bouquet and Ăngela Molina got the part after Buñuel had difficulties working with Schneider. I know, too, that the theory has been advanced that Conchita is a terrorist and that she finally sleeps with Mathieu after he agrees to become one, too â hence the bomb that explodes at the end of the film. (A theory that reduces a masterwork to the level of hack thriller-filmmaking.) Iâm sure that someone has come up with an explanation for the burlap sack, too, along with the fly in Mathieuâs drink and the mouse caught in a trap and any other incidental detail that sticks in viewersâ minds and can be fitted into an elaborately reductive network of symbolism. But my ultimate response to all of these enigmatic details is delight that they are there, that they popped up in Buñuelâs mind as he made the film and that he could and did get away with them. They are what keeps me coming back to Buñuelâs films with renewed interest and revived delight, viewing after viewing.
FRENCH CONNECTION (1971) â â â â â
 French Connection (1971) : lâadrĂ©naline du rĂ©el, ou la naissance du polar moderne Verdict dâentrĂ©e Thriller sec, nerveux et radical, French Connection dynamite le film policier classique en lui injectant une brutalitĂ© quasi documentaire. En refusant tout glamour et toute idĂ©alisation, William Friedkin signe une Ćuvre fondatrice, aussi inconfortable que passionnante, qui redĂ©finit durablementâŠ