Madeleine Bouchez

参加作品

We're Not Angels... Neither Are They
Tantante
A group of friends is shaken when the girl falls in love. But the three boys will do anything to stop the romance.
La Faute
It All Depends on Girls
Augustine
In Montmartre, Paris, two friends are leading a happy carefree Bohemian existence. Jean-Luc is a cabinetmaker, Mathieu is a sculptor. Then they both meet the love of their lives and decide to get married. Unfortunately, the objects of their desire are not so eager to be drawn into matrimony.
The Beach Hotel
Grandma Dandrel
August in Brittany at a seaside hotel. Some guests are new, some come every year and are friends. The men nearing middle age fish and plan infidelities; their wives have surprises of their own in store. Teens fall in and out of love. Kids not yet teens have their own parties and friendships. In 11 months, most but not all will be back.
Silence... We're Shooting
The Countess
Les petits dessous des grands ensembles
Mme de Chavey
There are small problems everywhere, including in a Paris area bourgeois housing development. In this particular building, a motley crew tries to resolve shared co-ownership problems. Among them, a Foreign Legion colonel and his dog; an unfaithful gynecologist and his fiery nurse; a voyeuristic filmmaker and his editor in love; a Don Juan-type antique dealer; an adorable old lady and her nice son who turns into a drag queen at night; an FIFG interviewer; an unbearable opera singer; a lesbian; a deceived woman.
Le commando des chauds lapins
During the debacle of 1940, the turbulent adventures of a pimp, his "five secretaries" and three soldiers.
The Big Delirium
A young peasant named Pierre makes friends with John and his sister Sonia, young bourgeoisie, who invite him to their home. Pierre soon falls in love with Emily, John's mistress. After the death of the father of his hosts, he has the idea of ​​transforming their peaceful house into a brothel.
Na!
Ms Jeandieu
Pas folle la guêpe
ブルジョワジーの秘かな愉しみ
Une cliente du salon de thé (uncredited)
In Luis Buñuel’s deliciously satiric masterpiece, an upper-class sextet sits down to dinner but never eats, their attempts continually thwarted by a vaudevillian mixture of events both actual and imagined.