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      • Claude: I took a secret passage. The Narrator: Paris, France, 1789. Thirty years later, under the reign of Louis XVI, longstanding grievances between aristocrat and peasant were about to boil over.
      www.imdb.com › title › tt0066402
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  2. And to us, pleasure is our business. Duke d'Escargot: Then your business should be a pleasure, making my pleasure a business. Philippe: Unless, some mistake business for pleasure. While others know no business but pleasure. Duke d'Escargot: In that case sir I will show you my business.

  3. More to explore. Start the Revolution Without Me: Directed by Bud Yorkin. With Gene Wilder, Donald Sutherland, Hugh Griffith, Jack MacGowran. Two mismatched sets of identical twins, one aristocrat, one peasant, mistakenly exchange identities on the eve of the French Revolution.

  4. Start the Revolution Without Me. Start the Revolution Without Me is a 1970 British-French-American period comedy film directed by Bud Yorkin and starring Gene Wilder, Donald Sutherland, Hugh Griffith, Jack MacGowran, Billie Whitelaw, Orson Welles (playing himself as narrator) and Victor Spinetti. The comedy is set in revolutionary France where ...

  5. A great memorable quote from the Start the Revolution Without Me movie on Quotes.net - Duke d'Escargot: What brings you to Paris? Philippe: Oh, you might say a little business... Pierre: ...and a little pleasure. Duke d'Escargot: Which do you prefer? Business, or pleasure? Pierre: Well that depends on what you regard as business.

  6. Aug 14, 1970 · Start the Revolution Without Me: Directed by Bud Yorkin. With Gene Wilder, Donald Sutherland, Hugh Griffith, Jack MacGowran. Two mismatched sets of identical twins, one aristocrat, one peasant, mistakenly exchange identities on the eve of the French Revolution.

    • (3.1K)
    • Comedy, History
    • Bud Yorkin
    • 1970-08-14
  7. An account of the adventures of two sets of identical twins, badly scrambled at birth, on the eve of the French Revolution. One set is haughty and aristocratic, the other poor and somewhat dim. They find themselves involved in palace intrigues as history happens around them. Based, very loosely, on Dickens's _A Tale of Two Cities_, Dumas's _The ...

  8. Feb 4, 1970 · Two French peasants are mistaken for a pair of aristocratic nobles in this historical situation comedy. Gene Wilder and Donald Sutherland play the dual roles. Happy to be taken for nobles, the pair soon runs to escape the guillotine in the wake of the French Revolution's blood purge of the upper class and royalty.