Director: Danièle Dubroux

foto regista
Birthday: 1947-09-04
Born in: Paris, France
Biography: Danièle Dubroux (born September 4, 1947) is a French director, screenwriter, and actress. Description above from the Wikipedia article Danièle Dubroux, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Known for

After You

Antoine works in a bar in Paris. One evening on his way home from work, he intervenes when a man tries to commit suicide. He feels strangely guilty about having saved the man's life and constantly tries to help him, make things better. No matter what Antoine does, he can't get Louis's mind off Blanche, the woman of his dreams, his sole obsession, the reason why he wanted to die... Antoine decides to look for her, but doesn't let Louis know.
Search similar movies
6.0
After+You
Eros Therapy

A husband wants to win back his wife, even though she has been living with her lesbian lover for six months.
Search similar movies
4.2
Eros+Therapy
Eros Therapy

2004

Search similar movies
The Little Coquette

Fifteen-year-old Camille is a vulnerable and a strong-willed seductress- she chooses, she takes, she leaves; she can go very far in her desire for freedom. She is the daughter of disunited parents, Armand, a professor and Colette, an intellectual bourgeois. She manages to seduce Jean-Louis, a professor of letters of thirty-seven years, friend and colleague of her father. She makes him commit a lot of extravagance - he even dyed blond. Later she had a passion for Samuel, a former student of Jean-Louis, lout and trafficker. She is not easy, men learn at their expense, either sentimentally, as with the teacher, or that the first sexual experience come to ignite the relationship with Samuel.
Search similar movies
3.0
The+Little+Coquette
The Little Coquette

1987

Search similar movies
L'Olivier

Filmed between 1973 and 1975, L’Olivier was produced by the Vincennes Cinema Group. This activist collective of teachers and filmmakers, formed on the occasion of this film, attempts to explain the Palestinian problem through interviews. The Olivier was one of the first films to attempt to give substance to what was still largely ignored in the West: the existence of the Palestinian people and their fight to recover their rights. L'Olivier responds to a concern: the already weak support of French public opinion for the Palestinian cause diminished following the Munich operation of 1972. Structured in such a way as to tell the Palestinian story and explain the state of the struggle at the time, the film appeals to global militant solidarity and, in particular, to European political commitments.
Search similar movies
10.0
L%27Olivier