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keiferski · 2 years ago
If you're wondering who this was: in the English-speaking world, he's probably most famous for Le Samourai, which was a great film and an influence on a host of other works, most recently being Drive. I really enjoyed Un flic too.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuhPR3xeJm0

costanzaDynasty · 2 years ago
My favorite was Le Cercle Rouge. Robert Evans supposedly was pushing for him to play Michael in the Godfather.
vmchale · 2 years ago
Un flic was great.
HNDen21 · 2 years ago
First movie I saw with him was Borsalino... Jean-Paul Belmondo was in it as well

It's been a while, I should rewatch it

type0 · 2 years ago
Belmondo also lived until 88 and died just 3 years ago
TacticalCoder · 2 years ago
My favorite picture of him, with another iconic french star of the same era, Brigitte Bardot:

https://www.entrevue.fr/de/brigitte-bardot-exprime-son-inqui...

082349872349872 · 2 years ago
jajko · 2 years ago
He was insanely handsome for any era, and in actual manly way (spent some time fighting in Indochina, say equivalent of US Vietnam veteran, when folks don't talk about such stuff you know they have reasons).

Couple that with very good acting skill, good luck on some stellar directors of that time and you end up with timeless pieces which are very watchable even after 50-60 years.

When living in Geneva I've secretly hoped to bump into him by a chance on some lake promenade walk or in restaurant, just to show my respect for him. Oh well, there goes another legend of my youth.

Dead Comment

ofrzeta · 2 years ago
Something missing from the obituaries is a funny trivia story about the guns they found at Delon's home in February 2024. 72 guns, 3000 rounds of ammo and no permit. He even had his own gun range. The lack of a permit didn't seem to be a problem until he was 88 and in need of a nurse.
cryptica · 2 years ago
It's interesting how celebrity culture works that most Americans have probably never heard of this guy.

French people know essentially every American movie star but there is almost no culture flow in the other direction when it comes to film.

Some might suggest that there is a language barrier since French is not as widely spoken as English internationally... Yet I was surprised to find out that, for example, a lot of Russians above a certain age know about French film celebrities. The language barrier does not seem to have been a problem in that case.

I think maybe it's partly because most Americans will refuse to watch films with subtitles whereas people in most other countries who don't speak English are used to it.

egorfine · 2 years ago
Alain Delon was insanely popular in Soviet Union, along with other french celebrities like Jean-Paul Belmondo, Louis de Funes, Gerard Depardieu, Pierre Richard.

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x436413 · 2 years ago
alain delon was huge in soviet union and by extension in various zones of soviet influence, because france was soviet friendly state and their cinematography was pretty good. back before the anglo-american establishment gained full cultural dominance, the world was divided not just along the comic lines of "axis", there was more subtlety to it. there was a whole cultural space that existed separately from english speaking world, and it wasn't restricted to specific countries. it was more like european/soviet/communist-regime sphere, where europeans were socialist sympathetic, soviets were open to their influence and various communist regime countries provided exciting, ethnic backdrop and variety. it is to this day a kind of secret language (now mostly dead) that i share with random old men from kenya: they too have watched alain delon movies, can sing along to joe dassin, know who dalida is, etc.
082349872349872 · 2 years ago
Didn't Vladimir Vysotsky have a french girlfriend?

While watching a retro-Soviet russian program, I was amused to see a videotape on a desk clearly labeled «Эммануэль» — "Emmanuelle".

(I'm pretty sure Americans could watch that even despite subtitles?)

EDIT: come to think of it, both france and russia (as well as bits of africa?) used SECAM, which probably helped cultural exchange a great deal. Back in the day, it was easier for us to get not-broadcast-in-the-US anime than not-broadcast-in-the-US BBC programs, despite the language barrier, because the former were NTSC but the latter PAL.

Sting has a great story about watching Soviet children's programming while at uni (probably explaining his lines "I don't subscribe to this point of view / It'd be such an ignorant thing to do / If the Russians love their children too"), but I kind of wondered if his friend who built the SECAM decoder had, at least originally, been more interested in picking up cross-channel programming than cross-iron-curtain?

rawgabbit · 2 years ago
I remember him for this song he made with Dalida. His deep voice is something I wished I had. https://youtu.be/_ifJapuqYiU
arunix · 2 years ago
I only knew of him from Zorro (1975) [1], and I remember that mainly due to the whacky soundtrack [2]

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zorro_(1975_Italian_film)

[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LBqP75axK8

katspaugh · 2 years ago
Some of his best movies are Le Circle Rouge and Le Samuraï.
29athrowaway · 2 years ago
His sister is in Le Samuraï as well.