Roland Ménard

Roland Ménard

Movies for Roland Ménard...

La poupée rouge
Title: La poupée rouge
Character: The uncle
Released: January 7, 1970
Type: Movie
In an undetermined time and place, where civil war is raging, two young girls, Agnès fanatic of revolutionary ideology and soft and carefree Pop, weather the storm by constantly opposing each other...
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Tintin and the Temple of the Sun
Title: Tintin and the Temple of the Sun
Character: Lecturer (voice)
Released: December 13, 1969
Type: Movie
When seven archaeologists find an ancient Inca temple, they become victims of an ancient curse. Back in Europe, one by one they fall into a deep sleep and only once a day, all at the same time, they wake up for a few minutes and experience hallucinations where the sinister living mummy of Rascar Capac appears.
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La terreur et la vertu: Robespierre
Title: La terreur et la vertu: Robespierre
Character: Couthon
Released: October 17, 1964
Type: Movie
From April to July 1794, Robespierre forms a triumvirate with Saint-Just and Couthon. He plans to instate his ideal based on virtue and in times of revolutionary crisis, on terror. In May, he establishes the Cult of the Supreme Being. However, he still has numerous enemies...
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Title: Poly
Character: Narrateur (voice)
Released: December 21, 1961
Type: TV
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Godzilla, the Monster of the Pacific Ocean
Title: Godzilla, the Monster of the Pacific Ocean
Character: Unidentified Character (voice)
Released: March 14, 1957
Type: Movie
Obscure French version of the original Godzilla. The film combines elements of the original Toho version and the American King of the Monsters! in a unique assemblage exclusive to the Francophone market. Released by Les Films du Verseau.
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La Crise du logement
Title: La Crise du logement
Character: Narrateur
Released: January 1, 1955
Type: Movie
One year after Abbé Pierre's famous call for help on 1-2-1954 exposing the appalling conditions in which millions of French people barely survived, nothing had changed much. In 1955, the housing crisis was rife and entire families were forced to live cramped in dilapidated buildings or in slums. Jean Dewever, outraged like Abbé Pierre by such an infamous situation, took his camera and made this militant short in the hope of alerting not only the average viewer but also the competent authorities.