Man Is a Woman explained

Man Is a Woman
Director:Jean-Jacques Zilbermann
Music:Giora Feidman
Cinematography:Pierre Aïm
Editing:Monica Coleman
Distributor:PolyGram Film Distribution
Runtime:100 min
Country:France
Language:French / Yiddish / English
Budget:$4.1 million
Gross:$3.8 million[1]

Man Is a Woman (French title: L'homme est une femme comme les autres) is a 1998 French film directed by Jean-Jacques Zilbermann.

Synopsis

Simon Eskanazy is a thirty-year-old gay musician. Born into a Jewish family, he took great pains to accept his homosexuality, and to get his family (including his mother and his uncle, Salomon) to do the same. The latter, Uncle Salomon is a wealthy banker who offered him a deal: he'll give him 10 million francs and will bequeath his mansion to Simon only if Simon agrees to marry a woman. First reluctant, he met Rosalie Baumann, a Jewish singer known for singing in Yiddish, she is very observant, and her parents live in the United States. Little by little, while getting to know her, Simon falls in love with her.

Cast

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: L\'Homme est une femme comme les autres (1998) - JPBox-Office.