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  1. Confidentially Yours

    Confidentially Yours

    PG1983 · Western · 1h 30m

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  1. Reviewed by: Angus Wolfe Murray. Read Angus Wolfe Murray's DVD Review. "Although designed in a B-movie mould, with classical film noir touches, this has the advantage of a relaxed Truffaut, a glamorous Ardant and an intense Trintignant". Tweet. It wasn't supposed to be like this, but Finally Sunday!, a lightweight entertainment that followed ...

  2. Confidentially Yours (French: Vivement dimanche !; known as Finally, Sunday! in other English-speaking markets) is a 1983 French comedy mystery film directed by François Truffaut. Based on the 1962 novel The Long Saturday Night by American author Charles Williams , it tells the story of Julien Vercel ( Jean-Louis Trintignant ), an estate agent ...

  3. Language: French. Support: Black and White. Runtime: 106 min. Aka: Finally, Sunday! ; Confidentially Yours ; Finally Sunday! An in-depth review of the film Vivement dimanche! (1983), aka Finally, Sunday!, directed by Francois Truffaut, featuring Fanny Ardant, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Jean-Pierre Kalfon.

    • François Truffaut
  4. Aug 5, 2019 · CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS (aka: FINALLY SUNDAY) (VIVEMENT DIMANCHE!) (director/writer: Francois Truffaut; screenwriters: Suzanne Schiffman/Jean Aurel, from ”The Long Saturday Night” by Charles Williams; cinematographer: Néstor Almendros; editor: Martine Barraqué; music: Georges Delerue; cast: Fanny Ardant (Barbara Becker), Jean-Louis ...

  5. "Finally, Sunday" however is more Hitchcockian in theme than execution. There is the element of the wrongly accused man, but, Truffaut takes this material, based on the novel "The Long Saturday Night" by Charles Williams, and adds a dash of 40s noir and throws in plenty of humor for good measure.

  6. Noah review â 'a preposterous but endearingly unhinged epic' Russell Crowe wrestles angels and demons in Darren Aronofsky's $125m mashup of the ancient story of Noah, writes Mark Kermode

  7. theriverjordan’s review published on Letterboxd: François Truffaut’s final film is an unfulfilled promise of what was to come, in the form of a tribute to the most fond influence of his past.

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