Pépé le Moko: Difference between revisions
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An example:<br> | An example:<br> | ||
In the Morrissey song at 3m12s, the following can be heard:<br> | In the Morrissey song at 3m12s, the following can be heard:<br> | ||
[[File:Good In Your Time Pepe clip.mp3]] | [[File:Good In Your Time Pepe clip.mp3]]<br> | ||
See also:<br> | See also:<br> | ||
[[Jean Gabin]] | [[Jean Gabin]] |
Revision as of 19:46, 27 March 2024
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Relevance
The samples used throughout You Were Good In Your Time are derived from this film.
Information and translation via member Sidney24 (2009).
An example:
In the Morrissey song at 3m12s, the following can be heard:
See also:
Jean Gabin
Mentioned In
Wikipedia Information
Pépé le Moko ([pe.pe lə mo.ko]) is a 1937 French film directed by Julien Duvivier starring Jean Gabin, based on a novel of the same name by Henri La Barthe and with sets by Jacques Krauss. An example of the 1930s French movement known as poetic realism, it recounts the trapping of a gangster on the run in Algiers, who believes that he is safe from arrest in the Casbah.