La Loi du Nord explained

La Loi du nord
Director:Jacques Feyder
Producer:Roland Tual
Starring:Michèle Morgan
Pierre Richard-Willm
Charles Vanel
Music:Louis Beydts
Cinematography:Jean Charpentier
Paul Fabian
Roger Hubert
Editing:Roger Spiri-Mercaton
Studio:Filmos
Distributor:DisCina
Runtime:95 minutes
Country:France
Language:French

La Loi du nord (in French pronounced as /la lwa dy nɔʁ/, "The Law of the North"; also called La Piste du Nord, "The Northern Trail") is a 1939 French adventure drama film directed by Jacques Feyder who co-wrote screenplay with Alexandre Arnoux and Charles Spaak, based on novel "Telle qu'elle était de son vivant" by Maurice Constantin-Weyer. The films stars Michèle Morgan, Pierre Richard-Willm and Charles Vanel. It tells the story of an escaped prisoner, his woman secretary and two guardsmen in the Far North. It was entered for the Grand Prix du Festival International du Film at the 1939 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

Plot

Robert Shaw manslaughters his wife's lover and runs away with his secretary Jacqueline. Helped by a French trapper who takes them for film-makers, they hide in Northern Canada. But the corporal Dalrymple discovers their identity and hunts them, until Jacqueline dies exhausted by such a hard expedition.

Cast

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Loi du nord (La). unifrance.org . 2014-01-25.