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Le Passage du Rhin is a 1960 French film directed by André Cayatte. It was released in the US as Tomorrow is My Turn.
Le Passage du Rhin | |
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Directed by | André Cayatte |
Written by | Maurice Aubergé André Cayatte |
Starring | Charles Aznavour |
Music by | Louiguy |
Production company | |
Release dates |
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Countries | France West Germany Italy |
Languages | French German |
Plot
editThe film tells the story of two French soldiers in the aftermath of the German invasion of France who become forced labourers on a German farm under the Service du travail obligatoire programme (STO), but become involved in the lives of their captors.
Cast
edit- Charles Aznavour as Roger Perrin
- Nicole Courcel as Florence
- Georges Rivière as Jean Durrieu
- Cordula Trantow as Helga
- Georges Chamarat as le boulanger / Baker
- Jean Marchat as Michel Delmas
- Albert Dinan as le milicien Cadix
- Michel Etcheverry as Ludovic
- Ruth Hausmeister as Frau Keßler
- Benno Hoffmann as Otto
- Henri Lambert as Louis
- Lotte Ledl as Lotte
- Bernard Musson as le prisonnier libéré
- Alfred Schieske as Fritz Keßler
- Betty Schneider as Alice
- Nerio Bernardi as Rodier
- Serge Frédéric
- Albert Rémy
- Colette Régis
- Jean Verner
Awards
editThe film won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival.[1]
References
edit- ^ Baroncelli, Jean de (11 November 1960). "En revoyant " Le Passage du Rhin "". Le Monde (in French). Archived from the original on 13 November 2023. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
External links
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