The Lion's Share (1971 film)

La Part des lions (lit.'The Lions' Share') is a 1971 crime film written and directed by Jean Larriaga and starring Robert Hossein, Charles Aznavour, Michel Constantin, Raymond Pellegrin and Elsa Martinelli.[3][4][page needed]

La Part des lions
Directed byJean Larriaga [fr]
Screenplay by
Story byJean Larriaga
Produced bySergio Gobbi[2]
Starring
CinematographyRoland Dantigny [fr][1]
Edited byGabriel Rongier[1]
Music byGeorges Garvarentz[1]
Production
companies
  • Paris Cannes Production
  • DC 7
Release dates
  • September 9, 1971 (1971-09-09) (France)
  • December 9, 1973 (1973-12-09) (Italy)
Running time
89 minutes[1]
Countries
  • France
  • Italy

It was a French and Italian co-production between Paris Cannes Production and DC 7.

Plot

edit

Maurice Ménard and Éric Chambon are two childhood friends. Ménard is a petty thief who is involved with a ruthless gang of bank robbers, while Chambon is a writer who will follow his long time friend until the loss of both of them.

Cast

edit

Production

edit

La Part des lions was directed by Jean Larriaga [fr]. His career was a director was short-lived and prior to his directorial debut with La Part des lions, he co-wrote Claude Mulot's The Blood Rose (1970) and has been an editor and assistant director at Gaumont.[1] Sergio Gobbi said that Larriaga was persistent on developing La Part des lions saying that Larriaga had "followed me everywhere with his script. And to have some peace, I said yes."[1] The film was originally known as L'Amicide, a word formed by combining "ami" (lit.'friend') and homicide. The film began shooting on May 10, 1971.[5]

La Part des lions was an international co-production between France and Italy through the Paris-based Paris Cannes Production and the Rome-based DC 7.[1]

Release

edit

La Part des Lions was released in France on September 8, 1971.[1] It had 768,707 spectators in France and reached 52nd place in the annual box office.[6]

It was released in Italy on December 9, 1973 as L'ultima rapina a Parigi.[1]

References

edit
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Curti & Lafond 2026, p. 105.
  2. Bifi.fr.
  3. Aa. Vv. Variety's Film Reviews: 1971-1974. Bowker Llc, 1983. ISBN 0835227936.
  4. Philippe Durant (6 November 2014). Gabin, Ventura, Delon... Les légendes du Polar. Sonatine, 2014. ISBN 978-2355843242.
  5. Curti & Lafond 2026, p. 106.
  6. Curti & Lafond 2026, p. 107.

Sources

edit
edit