Jacques Bar


Executive, Exhibitor, Producer

Biography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Once A Thief (1965) -- (Movie Clip) He's Going Back First scene for Van Heflin as San Francisco police inspector Vido and his partner (Steve Mitchell), at the scene of a murder and holdup (conducted by, we’ll soon learn, Alain Delon), revealing some history and tangling with his boss (Jeff Corey), in director Ralph Nelson’s Once A Thief, 1965.
Once A Thief (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Can I Sit In The Rumble Seat? First scene in which we can identify Alain Delon as Eddie, pretty-well confirming he committed a holdup and murder, followed by the cops, collecting his daughter (Tammy Locke) and wife Ann-Margret, who relates a memory that sure seems to refer to her own Swedish father, early in Once A Thief, 1965.
Once A Thief (1965) -- (Movie Clip) I Don't Need You San Francisco ex-con Eddie (Alain Delon), who we know is committing armed robberies on his own, nonetheless pushes back when his gangster brother Walter (Jack Palance), with his hoodlum sidekick (John Davis Chandler), offers him a job, pleasing Eddie’s wife (Ann-Margret), in Once A Thief, 1965.
Bridge To The Sun (1961) -- (Movie Clip) Love Is A Luxury First Japanese diplomat “Terry” Terasaki (James Shigeta) then Tenneseean Gwen (Carroll Baker, as the author of the original book) are called before his boss in Washington, D.C., 1935, recommending against his proposal, later consoled by her aunt (Ruth Masters), in Bridge To The Sun, 1961.
Bridge To The Sun (1961) -- (Movie Clip) Even If They Are Japanese Opening from MGM and debutante Belgian director Etienne Perier, introducing Carroll Baker as the author of the underlying memoir, Sean Garrison and Ruth Masters her escorts at a Washington, D.C. reception, and Hawaiian-born James Shigeta as the Japanese-diplomat leading man, in Bridge To The Sun, 1961.
Bridge To The Sun (1961) -- (Movie Clip) His Imperial Majesty Her first day in Tokyo, 1935, American bride Gwen (Carroll Baker), with Japanese diplomat husband “Terry” (James Shigeta), has some trouble with the emperor, does better with his pals (Tetsuro Tamba, Hiroshi Tomono), but less-so with his hostess aunt, in MGM’s Bridge To The Sun, 1961.
Have I The Right To Kill (a.k.a. L'Insoumis) -- (Movie Clip) Years Of Bitter War Impressive location shooting in the opening, French troops losing ground in Algeria, Alain Delon disobeying the orders of his lieutenant, Georges Geret, plus newsreel footage, in this dubbed version of Have I The Right To Kill (a.k.a. L'Insoumis or The Unvanquished), 1964.
Have I The Right To Kill (a.k.a. L'Insoumis) -- (Movie Clip) One Way For A Deserter Now holed up in an apartment in Algiers, having deserted the French Foreign Legion, Thomas (Alain Delon) receives his old lieutenant (Georges Geret), who's joined the militant right-wing O.A.S. faction, in Have I The Right To Kill (a.k.a. L'Insoumis or The Unvanquished), 1964.
Have I The Right To Kill (a.k.a. L'Insoumis) -- (Movie Clip) You'll Be An Accomplice Hired kidnapper Thomas (Alain Delon) has been sneaking drinks to human rights lawyer Dominique (Lea Massari), held in Algiers by his right-wing militant employers during the 1962 French occupation, in Have I The Right To Kill (a.k.a. L'Insoumis or The Unvanquished), 1964.

Bibliography