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  1. Lovers, Happy Lovers!

    Lovers, Happy Lovers!

    1954 · Comedy drama · 1h 25m

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  1. Knave of Hearts is a 1954 British-French comedy drama film directed by René Clément and starring Gérard Philipe, Valerie Hobson and Joan Greenwood. The film was shot at the Elstree Studios of Associated British and on location across London including Trafalgar Square and Hyde Park. The film's sets were designed by the art director Ralph ...

  2. In Syfy 's original miniseries Alice, the Knave, played by Philip Winchester, is reimagined as Jack Heart (playing on the fact that "knaves" are now called "jacks"), the son of Mary Elizabeth Heart, a reimagining of both the Queen of Hearts and the Red Queen. Jack is the heir to the throne of Wonderland, but escaped to the "real" world to avoid ...

  3. Knave of Hearts: Directed by René Clément. With Gérard Philipe, Valerie Hobson, Joan Greenwood, Margaret Johnston. A philanderer fakes suicide with unexpected consequences.

    • (511)
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
    • René Clément
    • 1954-09-30
  4. The Knave of Hearts (also called Ilosovic Stayne or The Red Knight) is the secondary antagonist in the 2010 film Alice in Wonderland. The Knave of Hearts is first seen obtaining the Oraculum and taking it to the Red Queen as he shows her Alice slaying the Jabberwocky. Soon after, Stayne is briefly seen lying to Bayard the Bloodhound, getting him to believe that if he found Alice, his wife and ...

  5. The Knave of Hearts in Alice in Wonderland (1949) The Knave of Hearts appears in Dallas Bower's film adaptation of Alice in Wonderland as a stop-motion puppet created by Lou Bunin. In this version he is the Wonderland counterpart of Lewis Carroll himself, voiced by Stephen Murray who also plays the latter in live-action. The similarity between ...

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  6. Knave of Hearts is a 1954 film about the adventures of a French philanderer in Paris and London. In France, it was released as Monsieur Ripois (the title of the original novel by Louis Hémon). In the United States, it was originally released as Lovers, Happy Lovers!, then later re-released as Lover Boy.

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  8. Oct 30, 2012 · René Clément Monsieur Ripois aka Knave of hearts (1954) The Italian neo-realist influence that is so evident in René Clément’s Oscar-winning 1949 film Au-delà des grilles is also felt in this quirky romantic comedy, through its use of real locations (mostly in the bustling centre of London) and fluid, documentary-style photography.

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