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Bon Voyage (German: Glückliche Reise) is a 1954 West German musical comedy film directed by Thomas Engel and starring Paul Hubschmid, Inge Egger and Paul Klinger. [1] The film's sets were designed by the art directors Emil Hasler and Walter Kutz. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin and on location in Hamburg and the Balearic Islands.
The Carnival of Nivelles (French: Carnaval de Nivelles) is an annual festival held in Nivelles, Walloon Brabant, Belgium. The parade takes place yearly on the weekend of Quadragesima Sunday . [ 1 ] It lasts four days, starting the first Saturday of Lent and ending the following Tuesday.
Bon Voyage! is a 1962 American comedy film directed by James Neilson and produced by Walt Disney Productions. It stars Fred MacMurray, Jane Wyman, Deborah Walley, Tommy Kirk, and Kevin Corcoran as the Willard family on a European holiday. The character actor James Millhollin appears in the film as the ship's librarian. [3]
Y'a pas d'mal à se faire du bien: Claude Mulot [34] 1975: Before the Time Comes: Le Temps de l'avant: Anne Claire Poirier: Bound for Glory: Partis pour la gloire: Clément Perron: Confidences of the Night: L'amour blessé: Jean Pierre Lefebvre: Don't Push It: Pousse mais pousse égal: Denis Héroux: For Better or For Worse: Pour le meilleur et ...
Bon Voyage (English: "Have A Good Trip") is a 2003 French film directed by Jean-Paul Rappeneau, starring Isabelle Adjani, Gérard Depardieu, Virginie Ledoyen and Grégori Derangère; it's very loosely inspired by Professor Lew Kowarski's smuggling of the world's only supplies of heavy water out of France following its occupation by the Nazis. [3]
Bon Voyage, a German musical film directed by Alfred Abel; Bon Voyage, a short propaganda film by Alfred Hitchcock; Bon Voyage, a West German musical film; Bon Voyage, a 1958 Filipino film starring Fernando Poe Jr. Bon Voyage!, a Disney family film and comic book; Bon Voyage, a World War II drama
Bon Voyage is a 1944 short French language propaganda film made by Alfred Hitchcock for the British Ministry of Information.Although the film is short (26 minutes), it uses two radically different interpretations of the same events, a technique not unlike that used by Akira Kurosawa in Rashomon (1950), Errol Morris in The Thin Blue Line (1988), and Fernando Meirelles in Cidade de Deus (2002).
In 1976 it was once again Nivelles's turn to organise the Belgian Grand Prix, but the track was not considered safe enough for Formula One because of the condition of the tarmac. By 1980 the circuit was deemed too dangerous for car racing, but motorcycle events continued until 1981. When the circuit licence expired on June 30, 1981, the track ...