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Live-action TV film: United States: directed by John Clark Donahue and John Driver, US [29] Alice at the Palace: 1982: Live-action TV film: United States: film of Elizabeth Swados's 1981 Alice in Concert with Meryl Streep [30] Alice in Wonderland: 1983: Live-action TV film: United States: on PBS's Great Performances, based on the 1982 Broadway ...
La Boîte à merveilles is an autobiographical 1954 novel by Moroccan writer Ahmed Sefrioui. Background ... Fès: joyau de la civilisation islamique. Nouvelles ...
Alice in Wonderland (French: Alice au pays des merveilles) is a 1949 French film based on Lewis Carroll's 1865 fantasy novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Directed by Dallas Bower , the film stars Carol Marsh as Alice, Stephen Murray as Lewis Carroll , and Raymond Bussières as The Tailor.
The Sense of Wonder (original title: Le Goût des merveilles) is a 2015 French romance film written and directed by Éric Besnard. It stars Virginie Efira and Benjamin Lavernhe. [ 3 ] [ 4 ]
Just a Question of Love (French: Juste une question d'amour) is a 2000 French-Belgian drama television film directed by Christian Faure that premiered on France 2.
The film was released in a Blu-ray and DVD set on February 1, 2011, to celebrate its 60th anniversary, [77] featuring a new HD restoration of the film and many bonus features. Disney re-released the film on Blu-ray and DVD on April 26, 2016, to celebrate the film's 65th anniversary (a reprint of the anniversary release from five years earlier).
The Black Box (French: La Boîte noire) is a 2005 French mystery film directed by Richard Berry, written by Berry and Éric Assous, adapted from a novella by Tonino Benacquista, and starring José Garcia and Marion Cotillard.
The Hollywood Reporter found the film "uplifting, if you’re a believer", acknowledging director Kevan Otto's passion for the film and Richard T. Jones's ability to make his character's arc "almost believable", but criticizing the heavy-handed storytelling and technical aspects of the film, which it found "more on the level of broadcast TV than cinema". [5]