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  1. 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 ...

  2. Aug 10, 1983 · Confidentially Yours: Directed by François Truffaut. With Fanny Ardant, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Philippe Laudenbach. After he's implicated in several murders, a real estate agent hides out from the cops while his intrepid secretary does some private investigating of her own to locate the killer.

    • (7.5K)
    • Comedy, Crime, Mystery
    • François Truffaut
    • 1983-08-10
  3. Confidentially Yours. When his wife and her lover are found dead, real estate broker Julien Vercel (Jean-Louis Trintignant) becomes the prime suspect in the murders. To save himself from a long ...

    • (9)
    • François Truffaut
    • PG
    • Fanny Ardant
  4. Confidentially Yours (1983) -- (Movie Clip) Don't Be So Nasty The opening of Francois Truffaut's final feature, Jean-Louis Tringtignant in a duck blind, and Fanny Ardant, Truffaut's companion at the time, as his secretary, headed to work in a generic French city, from Confidentially Yours, 1983.

    • François Truffaut
    • Fanny Ardant
  5. Starring Fanny Ardant, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Philippe Laudenbach. The final film directed by François Truffaut is an unsung gem: an alternately suspenseful and comic homage to classic film noir and the work of Alfred Hitchcock, complete with chic black-and-white cinematography by the great Nestor Almendros. When his wife and her lover are ...

  6. He is present throughout Confidentially Yours and his presence, his sense of freedom, his complicity with the audience, and his joie de vivre pervade the film. Finally Sunday!, the British title of Confidentially Yours, is a grimly appropriate title for Truffaut’s last film since it was on a Sunday—October 21, 1984—that he died. In his ...

  7. User Reviews. "Delight has no Competitor, so it is always most." Emily Dickinson's epigram satisfyingly describes the sublime last film of François Truffaut "Vivement Dimanche!" 1983 ("Finally, Sunday" aka "Confidentially Yours"). It's a Hitchcockian thriller shot in black & white, with ("A Man and A Woman," "Trois Colours: Rouge") Jean Louis ...

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