Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Nov 18, 1971 · Two English Girls: Directed by François Truffaut. With Jean-Pierre Léaud, Kika Markham, Stacey Tendeter, Sylvia Marriott. At the beginning of the 20th century, middle-class young Frenchman Claude Roc meets young Englishwoman Ann Brown in Paris.

    • (5.9K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • François Truffaut
    • 1971-11-18
  2. Two English Girls (original French title: Les Deux Anglaises et le Continent, UK Title: Anne and Muriel), is a 1971 French romantic drama film directed by François Truffaut and adapted from a 1956 novel of the same name by Henri-Pierre Roché.

  3. At the beginning of the 20th century, Claude Roc, a young middle-class Frenchman, befriends Ann, an Englishwoman. While spending time in England with Ann’s family, Claude falls in love with her sister Muriel, but both families lay down a year-long separation without contact before they may marry.

    • (43)
    • 6
    • François Truffaut
    • 130 min
  4. May 13, 2013 · Having fallen in love over the summer, Claude (Jean-Pierre Leaud) receives his mother (Marie Mansart), in Wales to negotiate his marriage to Muriel (Stacey Tendeter), family friend Flint (Mark Peterson) mediating, director Francois Truffaut a little abstract, in Two English Girls, 1971.

    • François Truffaut
    • Jean-Pierre Leaud
  5. TWO ENGLISH GIRLS is the film of a man some ten or twelve years down the road; it is still playful and winsome, but it realizes more fully the consequences of an opportunity lost. The final scene shows Claude, fifteen years later, wandering in the garden where he used to walk with Anne and Muriel.

  6. This French film chronicles a decades-long love triangle between Claude (Jean-Pierre Léaud), an art critic, and sisters Ann (Kika Markham) and Muriel (Stacey Tendeter).

    • (19)
    • Drama, Romance
  7. Sep 30, 2023 · Truffaut’s second adaptation of a Henri-Pierre Roché literary work, Two English Girls exploring love’s many dualities: between intellectual and physical love; between joy and pain. Jean-Pierre Léaud delicately embodies the figure of the romantic dandy, torn between two English sisters.