Jean-claude Adelin


Biography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Hand, The (1981) -- (Movie Clip) Mandro Doesn't Think Presumably meaning well as he meets with his agent (Rosemary Murphy) and David (Charles Fleischer), who’s begun taking over for him, comic strip artist Jonathan (Michael Caine), who lost his hand in a car wreck, gets riled about his main character, leading to writer-director Oliver Stone’s grisly cameo, in The Hand 1981.
Ode To Billy Joe (1976) -- (Movie Clip) It Was A Good Book Early scenes with the Hartley family, in 1950’s Tallahatchie County, Mississippi, Glynnis O’Connor as Bobbie, with a book, her mother (Joan Hotchkis) and her father (Sandy McPeak), from director Max Baer’s box office hit based on Bobbie Gentry’s song, Ode To Billy Joe, 1976, also starring Robby Benson.
Ode To Billy Joe (1976) -- (Movie Clip) Your Dad's In Trouble With her dad (Sandy McPeak) left stuck on the bridge after an encounter with out of state hoodlums, Bobbie (Glynnis O’Connor) fetches brother James (Terence Goodman) with Billy Joe (Robby Benson) and Tom (Eddie Talr) from the sawmill for help, early in Ode To Billy Joe, 1976.
Story Of Women (1989) -- (Movie Clip) I Need To Have Fun Following the opening credits, Cherbourg, occupied France, 1943, Marie-Louise (Isabelle Huppert) returns home with her children, meeting friend Ginette (Marie Bunel) on the stairs and later friend Rachel (Myriam David) on the town, in director Claude Chabrol's fact-based Story Of Women, 1989.
Story Of Women (1989) -- (Movie Clip) She's Never Been Jewish In occupied France, 1943, Marie (Isabelle Huppert) learns that one friend has been taken by the Nazis, hears from another (Marie Bunel) that their attempted at-home abortion may have failed, then consoles her son (Guillame Foutrier), in Claude Chabrol's true story, Story Of Women, 1989.
Arsenic And Old Lace (1944) -- (Movie Clip) I Hope There's A Fatted Calf Daffy Aunts Abby and Martha (Josephine Hull, Jean Adair) are wondering why nephew Mortimer (Cary Grant, not seen) is so upset over their murder habit when his criminally insane brother Jonathan (Raymond Massey), with sidekick Einstein (Peter Lorre), appears, in Arsenic And Old Lace, 1944.
Vigilante (1983) -- (Movie Clip) I've Had It Up To Here Leave it to Fred Williamson (second-billed, as citizen “Nick”) and director Bill Lustig, the bracing opening of the 1983 low-budget revenge drama Vigilante, co-starring Robert Forster, in the role that inspired Quentin Tarantino to cast Forster in Jackie Brown, 1997.
Sherlock Holmes (1922) -- (Movie Clip) He's A Fiend John Barrymore in the title role, according to the screen story still a Cambridge student, pursues Wells (one William Powell) who, though a thief, we soon discover is in the thrall of the evil Moriarty (Gustav von Seyffertitz), early in Sherlock Holmes, 1922.
Arsenic And Old Lace (1944) -- (Movie Clip) Murder Will Out Just married famous critic Mortimer (Cary Grant) discussing a long lost brother with Aunt Abby (Josephine Hull), preparing a celebration with Aunt Martha (Jean Adair), presumes their crazy brother Teddy is to blame, as he discovers their shocking hobby, in Frank Capra's Arsenic And Old Lace, 1944.
Arsenic And Old Lace (1944) -- (Movie Clip) All Alone In The World Mortimer (Cary Grant) is desperate to delay his bride (Priscilla Lane) and have his uncle committed, having just discovered his aunts Abby and Martha (Josephine Hull, Jean Adair) like to poison old men, when a candidate (Edward McWade) appears, in Arsenic And Old Lace, 1944.
Arsenic And Old Lace (1944) -- (Movie Clip) Don't Mortimer Me! The opening introducing Cary Grant and Priscilla Lane as the marrying couple, written by Julius and Philip Epstein as a preamble to their adaptation of the Joseph Kesselring play, Frank Capra directing, the held-for-release 1944 hit Arsenic And Old Lace.
Zanjeer (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Spurious Medicines Maybe not the best English subtitles ever, but the meaning clear enough, actors M. Rajan and Purnima appearing as the father and mother of the boy who will grow up to be superstar Amitabh Bachchan, in the prologue from Prakash Mehra's landmark Bollywood "Masala" pulp musical Zanjeer, 1973.

Trailer

Bibliography