Latin Quarter (1939 film) explained

Latin Quarter
Music:C.P. Simon
Editing:Maurice Serein
Studio:Studio de la Seine
Distributor:Selb-Film
Runtime:101 minutes
Country:France

Latin Quarter (French: Quartier Latin) is a 1939 French comedy film directed by Christian Chamborant, Pierre Colombier and Alexander Esway and starring Bernard Lancret, Jean Tissier, Blanchette Brunoy and Junie Astor.[1] It was shot at the Courbevoie Studios in Paris and on location around the city. The film's sets were designed by the art director Georges Gratigny.

Synopsis

A wealthy banker, bored with his life, heads to the Latin Quarter of Paris where he pretends to be a struggling artist. He falls in love with a student from the Sorbonne and moves into the same boarding house as her while continuing his pretence of poverty.

References

  1. Phillips p.14

Bibliography