Michèle Verly

Michèle Verly

Movies for Michèle Verly...

L'Embuscade
Title: L'Embuscade
Character: Madame de Corsian
Released: March 26, 1941
Type: Movie
A young man is hired by an industrialist, while a secret hangs over his birth. His boss's wife turns out to be his mother, who hides the truth from him.
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They Were Five
Title: They Were Five
Character: L'amie d'Huguette
Released: September 1, 1936
Type: Movie
Five unemployed workers win 100,000 Francs in the national lottery. Instead of sharing the money, they buy a ruin and build an open-air cafe. But difficulties come to split their friendly group apart.
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The Lady of Lebanon
Title: The Lady of Lebanon
Character: Michelle
Released: January 1, 1934
Type: Movie
The French and the English spy on each other, in this adventure set in post World War I colonial Syria.
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The Chocolate Girl
Title: The Chocolate Girl
Character: Rosette
Released: February 12, 1932
Type: Movie
A bureaucratic civil servant is annoyed by the spoiled daughter of a rich chocolate maker, but lands up marrying her.
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Our Masters, the Servants
Title: Our Masters, the Servants
Released: November 7, 1930
Type: Movie
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La maison des hommes vivants
Title: La maison des hommes vivants
Released: November 1, 1929
Type: Movie
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Les taciturnes
Title: Les taciturnes
Released: September 27, 1929
Type: Movie
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Monte Cristo
Title: Monte Cristo
Character: Julie Morrel - la fille
Released: April 30, 1929
Type: Movie
This epic adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo was directed by Henri Fescourt, and stars Jean Angelo, Lil Dagover, Pierre Batcheff, the beautiful Marie Glory, and Bernhard Goetzke as the Abbé Faria.
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Le Passager
Title: Le Passager
Released: October 17, 1928
Type: Movie
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Belphégor
Title: Belphégor
Character: Colette Barjac
Released: January 1, 1927
Type: Movie
Belphégor deals with a series of mysterious appearances by a masked-and-robed figure in the Louvre; a security guard is murdered, and a later police trap is foiled when the phantom—“Belphégor” (the name of a legendary demon)—uses knock-out gas. Journalist Jacques Bellegarde of “Le Petit Parisien” (the real-life newspaper which published the original story in serial installments), investigates, and eventually discovers famous detective Chantecoq and his vivacious daughter Colette are also on the case.