B J Barie


Biography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Man Who Knew Too Much, The (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Que Sera, Sera Now in Marakesh, the deliberately incidental introduction of Doris Day’s hit song (a Jay Livingston/Ray Evans original), as mom Jo, Christopher Olsen her son Hank, James Stewart as dad, doctor Ben, Daniel Gelin their mysterious new French friend, in Alfred Hitchcock’s hit re-make, The Man Who Knew Too Much, 1956.
Le Plaisir (a.k.a. House Of Pleasure) -- (Movie Clip) Youth And Sardines From the narrating voice of the original author Guy de Maupassant, the introduction of the painter Jean (Daniel Gelin) and model Josephine (Simone Simon), in the third segment of director Max Ophuls' Le Plaisir, (a.k.a. House Of Pleasure) 1952.
Man Who Knew Too Much, The (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Assassinated, In London! Visiting American doctor Ben (James Stewart) gains the crucial guilty knowledge from what appears to be an expiring Arab (Daniel Gelin), who is really their mysterious French friend, at the bazaar in Marakesh, Doris Day his wife, in Alfred Hitchcock's second version of The Man Who Knew Too Much, 1956.
Man Who Knew Too Much, The (1956) -- (Movie Clip) We Never Thought Of A Frenchman Conversation moves from veils to snails as Bernard (Daniel Gelin) rescues Hank, Ben and Jo (Christopher Olsen, James Stewart and Doris Day) from a cultural mishap in Morocco in The Man Who Knew Too Much, 1956, director Alfred Hitchcock's only re-make.
Murmur Of The Heart (1971) -- (Movie Clip) He Collects In The Street In director Louis Malle’s opening, Dijon, 1954, jazz nut Laurent “Renzo” (Benoit Ferreux) and a friend have been collecting for French war veterans, then home with his father, brothers and mother (Daniel Gelin, Marc Winocourt, Fabien Ferreux, Lea Massari), in Murmur Of The Heart, 1971.
Murmur Of The Heart (1971) -- (Movie Clip) The Only Serious Philosophical Problem Bawdy business as studious teen Laurent “Renzo” (Benoit Ferreux) is assaulted by his brothers (Marc Winoucourt, Fabien Ferreux), one of them wearing their mother’s dress, in director Louis Malle’s partly autobiographical coming-of-age tale, Murmur Of The Heart, 1954.
Plucking The Daisy (1956) -- (Movie Clip) I Love Liars Broke teenage Agnes (Brigitte Bardot), who has run away to Paris, arrives at the newsroom where reporter Daniel (Daniel Gelin) and photographer Roger (Robert Hirsch), whom she met on the train, have promised they can get her racy story published, in Plucking The Daisy, 1956.
Plucking The Daisy (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Nonchalant Beauty Desperate for money so she can stay in Paris, teenage Agnes (Brigitte Bardot) has signed up for a strip-tease contest, deciding at the last minute on a disguise, her un-knowing journalist pals (Daniel Gelin, Robert Hirsch) in the audience, a money scene from Plucking The Daisy, 1956.
Murderer Lives At Number 21, The -- (Movie Clip) Like I'd Trust My Sister "Journalist" (really hustler) Turlot (Raymond Bussieres), who's discovered the stash of calling cards which a murderer has been leaving at crime scenes, is keen to work with Detective Wens (Pierre Fresnay), in director Henri-Georges Clouzot's The Murderer Lives At Number 21, 1942.
Ballad of a Soldier -- (Movie Clip) Vasya! Hero soldier Skvorstov (Vladimir Ivashov) accompanies amputee comrade Vasya (Yevgeni Urbansky) who fears his wife (Elsa Lezhdey) will not meet his train, in Grigori Chukhrai's Ballad of a Soldier, 1959.

Bibliography