L'inconnu d'un soir

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Edith, a young orphan, is exploited as a waitress and bullied by her adoptive father. But she has a dream: she wants to become a star. One day the Orient Express, which never stops at the little station across the café she works in, is forced to pull up due to a technical incident. And out of a carriage gets ... a company of dancers, who start rehearsing before Edith's amazed eyes. She meets the director of the company, handsome dancing star Harry Belmont, who takes an interest in her beauty and in her natural talent. When she leaves her obnoxious father for Vienna, Harry is absent. She nearly gets seduced by a libidinous man but, after a narrow escape, she gets a job from Treberg, the owner of the restaurant she had dined in. Treberg finds her there, hires her as a dancer and the pair soon meets tremendous success. A star is born but, realizing that he comes second to her, he prefers to vanish.

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08-04-1949

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90 min

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Director
Hervé Bromberger

Hervé Bromberger

Hervé Bromberger was a French film director and screenwriter active from the late 1940s to the early 1980s. Born in Marseille, he began his career as an assistant director on films like Les Amants du pont Saint-Jean (1947). Bromberger made his directorial debut with L'Inconnu d'un soir (1949). He directed films such as Seul dans Paris (1951), Les Fruits sauvages (1954), which won the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival, and La Bonne Tisane (1958). His works often explored social issues and human relationships, characterized by their realistic portrayal of contemporary life.
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