Word: moreau
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Baroque Grotesque. For an estimated $1,300,000, the Salkinds gathered an international cast: France's Jeanne Moreau, Germany's Romy Schneider, Greece's Katina Paxinou, Italy's Elsa Martinelli, the U.S.'s Anthony Perkins. They left the rest to Welles...
Then one day they meet a girl (Jeanne Moreau) with the same smile. Her name is Kathe. They fall in love with the girl...
...over three-fourths of the distance it is one of the most exciting and likable films so far produced by the new French school of cinema (TIME, Nov. 16, 1959). The performances are superb. The leading men range with ease from piffle to pathos, and Actress Moreau, who has too long been typed as a gamine Garbo, reveals a pretty capacity to clown...
...culture-minded towns in West Germany. The two earliest paintings were rather routine seascapes; the last eleven seemed to anticipate the expressionism of Emil Nolde. It was the paintings in between that interested art historians most. Just as Germany has its Russian-born Kandinsky; just as France has Gustave Moreau; and just as the U.S. has Marin and Arthur Dove, so Sweden now has its entry in the great international game of whose artists got into the abstract act first...
...first scene of the movie, a well-known Italian writer (Marcello Mastroianni) and his wife (Jeanne Moreau) arrive at a hospital in Milan to visit a dying friend (Bernhard Wicki). Leaving the friend's room some minutes later than his wife, the writer is accosted in the hall by a mental patient, a nymphomaniac. Impulsively, he enters her room...