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Chéri is a 1950 French comedy drama film directed by Pierre Billon and starring Marcelle Chantal, Jean Desailly and Marcelle Derrien. [1] [2] It is based on the 1920 novel of the same title by Colette. [3] The film's sets were designed by the art director Raymond Druart.
Chéri is a 2009 romantic comedy-drama film directed by Stephen Frears from a screenplay by Christopher Hampton, based on the 1920 novel of the same name and its 1926 sequel The Last of Chéri by French author Colette. It stars Michelle Pfeiffer and Rupert Friend. The film premiered at the 59th Berlin International Film Festival.
Le Miracle de la foi (2005) Le President a-t-il Le Sida (2006) by Arnold Antonin; Les Amours d'un Zombi (2010) by Arnold Antonin; Les Aventures de Jessica by Valentin C. Lustra; Les Couleurs de la Dignite by Vladimir Thelisma (2006) Les Evades (2013) by Valentin C. Lustra; Les Gens de Bien (1988) by Raynald Delerme; Les tontons noel aux sacs ...
Cheri Gaulke (born 1954), contemporary artist; Cheri Huber (born c. 1944), independent American Zen teacher; Cheri Keaggy (born 1968), gospel singer and songwriter; Cheri Maracle (born 1972), Indigenous Canadian actor and musician; Cheri Oteri (born 1962), American actress and comedian; Cheri Register (1945–2018), American author and teacher
The historiography of Haitian cinema is very limited. It consists only one double issue of the journal of the French Institute of Haiti Conjonction, released in 1983, devoted to film; a book by Arnold Antonin, published during the same year, entitled Matériel pour une préhistoire du cinéma haïtien ("Material for a prehistory of Haitian cinema"); and an article by the same author in the ...
C'est la vie, mon chéri (Chinese: 新不了情) is a 1993 Hong Kong romance film directed by Derek Yee and starring Lau Ching-wan, Anita Yuen and Carina Lau. It won six awards, including Best Film, during the 13th Hong Kong Film Awards.
As Bank of North Carolina, BNC used the name BNC Bank in South Carolina and Virginia, and the bank had planned to change to BNC Bank everywhere. However, BNCCORP of North Dakota, which operated as BNC National Bank, protested this change. [10] BNCCORP had filed for BNC Bank trademarks and sent BNC a warning letter in late 2014.
Darling Anatole (French: Anatole chéri) is a 1954 French comedy film directed by Claude Heymann and starring Alice Field, Paul Demange and Jim Gérald. [1] It is based on a comic strip by Albert Dubout. Demange had previously played the role of Anatole in Street Without a King (1950).