Prey for the Shadows explained

Prey for the Shadows
Director:Alexandre Astruc
Producer:Edmond Ténoudji
Music:Richard Cornu
Jean-Sébastien Bach
Cinematography:Marcel Grignon
Editing:Ghislaine Desjonquères
Denise de Casabianca
Studio:Les Films Marceau
Cocinor
Distributor:Marceau-Cocinor
Runtime:95 minutes
Country:France
Language:French

Prey for the Shadows is a 1961 French drama film directed by Alexandre Astruc, starring Annie Girardot, Daniel Gélin and Christian Marquand. It is also known as Shadow of Adultery. The original screenplay was written by Astruc, Claude Brulé and Françoise Sagan. The film was released on 14 April 1961. It had 620,504 admissions in France.[1]

Plot

The movie centers on the story of a woman who runs an art gallery and leaves her husband for another man, whom she eventually also leaves but becomes dependent on.

Cast

Themes

Alexandre Astruc described the main character as "a woman who feels in herself a very real need for freedom that is as much moral as social so that she sets about matching a man's work; but at the same time, because she is a woman, she feels the need to be passive, dominated, submissive."[2]

Production

The film was produced by Les Films Marceau in collaboration with Cocinor - Comptoir Cinématographique du Nord. It was shot from 20 July to 31 August 1960.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: La Proie pour l'ombre. French. AlloCiné. 2015-06-22.
  2. Book: Sadoul. Georges. Morris. Peter. 1972. Dictionary of Films. Berkeley, California. University of California Press. 295. 0-520-01864-8. registration.
  3. Web site: La Proie pour l'ombre. French. bifi.fr. Cinémathèque Française. 2015-06-22.