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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Le_PlaisirLe Plaisir - Wikipedia

    Le Plaisir (English title, House of Pleasure) is a 1952 French comedy-drama anthology film by German-born film director Max Ophüls (1902–1957) adapting three short stories by Guy de Maupassant — "Le Masque" (1889), "La Maison Tellier" (1881), and "Le Modèle" (1883). Ophüls was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction.

    • Joe Hajos, Maurice Yvain
    • Max Ophüls
  2. Le plaisir. Roving with his dazzlingly mobile camera around the decadent ballrooms, bucolic countryside retreats, urban bordellos, and painter's studios of late nineteenth-century French life, Max Ophuls brings his astonishing visual dexterity and storytelling bravura to this triptych of tales by Guy de Maupassant about the limits of spiritual ...

    • The Doctor
  3. Le Plaisir: Directed by Max Ophüls. With Claude Dauphin, Gaby Morlay, Madeleine Renaud, Ginette Leclerc. Three separate stories about the same thing: le plaisir (pleasure).

    • (5.1K)
    • Max Ophüls
    • Not Rated
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
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  5. Dec 17, 2021 · Le Plaisir was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction, going to Max Ophuls. This was Ophuls' last of two Oscar nominations in his career. Le Plaisir (English title, House of Pleasure) is a 1952 French comedy-drama anthology film by German-born film director Max Ophüls (1902–1957) adapting...

    • 97 min
    • 1070
    • MinimalisT ChanneL
  6. Apr 13, 2010 · Released on 04/13/2010. [speaking in foreign language] [Richard] I'm Richard Brody, and this clip is from Le Plaisir, Pleasure, a 1952 film by Max Ophüls. It's a collection of three short...

    • Condé Nast
    • 3 min
  7. An in-depth review of the film Le Plaisir (1952) directed by Max Ophuls, featuring Claude Dauphin, Gaby Morlay, Madeleine Renaud.

  8. Sep 15, 2008 · A lover of constant movement, Ophuls knew that, because of its very nature, life can never be fully satisfying, complete, or unambiguously happy. His world is full of unresolvable contradictions, a trait most explicitly developed in the central section of Le plaisir.

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