Yahoo Web Search

  1. The Man Who Loved Women

    The Man Who Loved Women

    1977 · Romance · 2h

Search results

  1. The Man Who Loved Women (French: L'Homme qui aimait les femmes) is a 1977 French comedy drama film directed by François Truffaut and starring Charles Denner, Brigitte Fossey, and Nelly Borgeaud. The film had a total of 955,262 admissions in France.

  2. Apr 27, 1977 · The Man Who Loved Women: Directed by François Truffaut. With Charles Denner, Brigitte Fossey, Nelly Borgeaud, Geneviève Fontanel. Bertrand Morane's burial is attended by all the women the forty-year-old engineer loved. We then flash back to Bertrand's life and love affairs, told by himself while writing an autobiographical novel.

    • (7.3K)
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
    • François Truffaut
    • 1977-04-27
  3. Marcel Berbert. Screenwriter. Michel Fermaud, Suzanne Schiffman, François Truffaut. Production Co. Les Films du Carrosse. Genre. Romance, Comedy, Drama. Original Language. French (France) Release...

    • (11)
    • Charles Denner
    • François Truffaut
    • Romance, Comedy, Drama
  4. Mar 21, 2014 · By Richard Brody. March 21, 2014. François Truffaut’s bittersweet 1977 comedy, about the pleasure and the pathos of sexual pursuit, is also an ode to the art of writing. The film’s title is ...

    • Condé Nast
  5. Feb 22, 2010 · The Man Who Loved the Idea of Women: François Truffaut’s ’70s Self-Reflection - Slant Magazine. Film. The Man Who Loved the Idea of Women: François Truffaut’s ’70s Self-Reflection. Throughout his life several of Truffaut’s deepest relationships were with movies. by Aaron Cutler. February 22, 2010.

  6. 2h 1977. Overview. Synopsis. Credits. Film Details. Articles & Reviews. Trivia. Notes. Brief Synopsis. An inveterate womanizer tries to make sense of his problem by writing his memoirs. Cast & Crew. Read More. François Truffaut. Director. Charles Denner. Leslie Caron. Brigitte Fossey. Nathalie Baye. Nelly Borgeaud. Film Details. Also Known As.

  7. Oct 1, 1977 · Though Bertrand was obsessed by women and though he might have felt guilty about using them at times, it is not an untypical Truffaut reversal that Bertrand was as much used by them, not meanly...

  1. People also search for