The Grand Hotel Affair | |
Director: | André Hugon |
Producer: | André Hugon |
Starring: | Henri Alibert Édouard Delmont Noël Roquevert |
Music: | Vincent Scotto |
Cinematography: | Raymond Agnel |
Editing: | Monique Lacombe |
Studio: | Productions André Hugon |
Distributor: | Cinéma de France |
Runtime: | 90 minutes |
Country: | France |
Language: | French |
The Grand Hotel Affair (French: L'affaire du Grand Hôtel) is a 1946 French comedy mystery film directed by André Hugon and starring Henri Alibert, Édouard Delmont and Noël Roquevert.[1] [2] It was shot at the Marseille Studios of Gaumont and on location around the city.. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gilbert Garcin.
In Marseille, the fisherman Tonin suspects that a group of characters he sees are engaged in smuggling. In fact they turn out to be diving for wreckage, but he is now left wondering if they are involved in a pair of murders committed at the grand hotel.