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Quicknation Charade
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Charade is a 1963 movie written by Peter Stone and Marc Behm, directed by Stanley Donen, and starring Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn. It also stars Walter Matthau, James Coburn, George Kennedy, Dominique Minot, Ned Glass, and Jacques Marin. It spans several genres including suspense-thriller, romance, and comedy.
This movie fell into the public domain due to a lack of copyright notice. tableAudrey Hepburn plays Regina 'Reggie' Lampert, who returns to Paris from a holiday in Switzerland. She plans to ask her husband Charles for a divorce, but finds that the flat is empty and that all their possesions have been sold for cash. The police tell her that her husband has been found murdered, thrown from a train, but the money cannot be found. Reggie meets a stranger who gives his name as Peter Joshua (Cary Grant) and claims to want to help her. She is also summoned to the US Embassy, where she meets Hamilton Bartholemew (Matthau), who claims to be a CIA officer. Joshua changes his name several times, further confusing Reggie, and says he's interested in her husband's money, which apparently came from a World War II payroll he had stolen. His partners in crime (played Coburn, Kennedy and Glass) threaten Reggie to tell her where the money is, as they claim he stole it from them. Reggie realises that she actually knows nothing about her late husband. Everyone assumes Regina must know where the money is. But the situation becomes more tense and confusing as the searchers begin turning up dead. In addition to the clever, catchy , and the repartee between Grant and Hepburn; Charade is also memorable for its location filming in Paris, Henry Mancini's score and theme song, and the animated titles by Maurice Binder. The movie was remade in 2002 as , the writer of the story, Peter Stone, and the voice of director, Stanley Donen, appear briefly in the movie. When Reggie goes the U.S. Embassy to meet with Bartholomew, two men get on the elevator as she gets off. The man who says, is Stone, although the voice is Donen's. Stone's voice is also used for the U.S. Marine, guarding the Embassy, at the end of the film. Copyright status According to the Archive.org website and other sources, due to an irregularity involving the lack of a copyright notice on this film, it is now in the public domain. No claim of copyright was put into the original prints, despite that copyright notices were mandatory in the US prior to 1989. This was not a major issue until the introduction of VCR equipment meant that companies could produce retail copies with no need to pay any licence fees. As a result, there are many editions of on VHS and DVD, of widely varying sound and picture quality. Two notable releases include a restored Criterion DVD edition (selling for, on average, ten times the average cost of most DVD releases of the film), and the film was also included as a bonus feature on the DVD release of the remake, |
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