The Widow and the Innocent explained

The Widow and the Innocent
Director:André Cerf
Producer:Pierre Gérin
Starring:Sophie Desmarets
Jean Desailly
Saturnin Fabre
Music:Francis Lopez
Cinematography:André Thomas
Editing:Andrée Sélignac
Studio:Les Productions Cinématographiques
Distributor:Ciné Sélection
Runtime:95 minutes
Country:France
Language:French

The Widow and the Innocent (French: La veuve et l'innocent) is a 1949 French comedy film directed by André Cerf and starring Sophie Desmarets, Jean Desailly and Saturnin Fabre.[1] [2] [3] The film's sets were designed by the art director Robert-Jules Garnier.

Synopsis

Nicole, a young lawyer, is given her first case in court. However her defence of Achille Panoyau, accused of murder, is unsuccessful and he is sentenced to be executed. She then tells her fiancée Claude that she will not marry him unless he can save Panoyau from "the widow" - a nickname for the guillotine. Claude does this by stealing the guillotine and taking it with them on their honeymoon. Whilst evading the police on their tail they manage to discover the real murderer and Panoyau is set free.

Cast

References

  1. https://www.unifrance.org/film/7468/la-veuve-et-l-innocent
  2. Rège p.197
  3. Hubert-Lacombe p.76

Bibliography