This superb Poster of the Film The Big Blond With a Black Shoe with the hilarious Pierre Richard will be ideal for your decoration!
- Paper characteristic:
- 🎨 Canvas: world standard in terms of printing and imitating a “painting canvas” appearance .
- By default, the poster contains a 4 cm white border for framing (frame not included). If you don't want it, please choose "without white border".
- ✅ Size: several choices available . ✅
- Great UV resistance .
- Maximum color vibrancy, without reflections .
- Recycled paper, guaranteeing respect for the environment.
- Poster carefully packaged and delivered in a protective tube for total protection .
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FREE STANDARD DELIVERY .
⚠️ Frame not included. ⚠️
Description of this Poster of the Film The Tall Blond With a Black Shoe
"The Big Blond with a Black Shoe is a 1972 French spy film. It is the first film to feature François Perrin, a down-on-his-luck simpleton who constantly finds himself in dangerous and comical situations, but who eventually finds himself get out.
In the depths of French counter-espionage, a plot is being hatched against Colonel Toulouse by his deputy, Bernard Milan, to take his place. On orders from Milan, the agent delivers heroin to the United States, allows himself to be arrested and questioned with a lie detector, revealing that the heroin was delivered to the United States on the instructions of French counter-espionage. The scandal is so resounding that Louis Toulouse is forced to urgently return from his leave to check what is happening.
Interrogation of Milan is useless - the latter at first rejects the possibility of such actions on his part, and about the photo in which he is depicted with his agent, he says that it is a photomontage . Subsequently, Colonel Toulouse, who accidentally discovered "snitches" in his house, invites his assistant Perrasch to his home and arranges to meet him the next day at 9:30 a.m. at Orly airport with a super special agent who will will help take care of Milan.
However, no agent actually exists - it is a "dick trap": Perrash is tasked with choosing any man from the crowd, whom the people of Milan, who follow Perrash, mistake for a superagent . His choice falls on a humble violinist, François Perrin, returning from a concert in Munich. The absent-minded violinist attracts his attention by wearing different shoes. Perrasch first greets him, then, as if he were mistaken, apologizes and leaves. The men from Milan (the demonstration was intended for them), observing the meeting from afar, interpreted the contact as a transmission of instructions to a "super-agent" and began to spy on Perrin. They secretly equip his house with listening devices, waiting for him to make contact with Toulouse. While observing Perrin, they discover many "oddities" (different shoes, refusal to go to the dentist, strange behavior, flushing toilets) and become more and more convinced that François is a real super-agent with excellent cover. (a modest life without much action) and that he even went to the United States.
With the help of a beautiful employee, Christine (instructed that Perrin is a "super agent"), Milan's agents lure him into the house, where they monitor them using video cameras. But not only can Christine learn nothing from him (since there is nothing to learn), but she falls in love with him. Perrin, without knowing it, circumvents all the dangerous traps set by Milan - with the help of the men from Toulouse secretly charged with protecting him, whom he does not notice either. Cutting short all of Milan's attempts to figure out what's going on, Toulouse nevertheless senses that Milan may be wrong (that François is probably not an agent, as Christine said), so Toulouse again deliberately speaks loudly. strong that "the violinist has done the work" and that he will "report back" to us the same day.
Realizing that things are heading towards a denouement, Toulouse orders the withdrawal of Blondin's guards, but his assistant Perrasch, who seriously fears for Blondin's life, reinforces François' guards. It all ends with a shootout in Perrin's apartment, which results in the death not only of Toulouse and Milan's men, but also of Milan himself in Blondin's place. Perrin's friend Maurice Lefebvre, who happened to witness the murders, has a mental breakdown and Perrin flies to Rio de Janeiro instead of Munich, taking Christine with him. Toulouse, who is watching Blondin on the screen, tells Perrush that he will have to contact Blondin when he returns from Rio, because "this guy is doing very well."
The film ends with a quote from the French Penal Code: “Everyone has the right to respect for their private life.”