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Pierre Bost
★ Writing

Pierre Bost

1901 – 1975 · Lasalle, Gard, France · Active 1942–2010

Pierre Bost (5 September 1901, Lasalle, Gard – 6 December 1975, Paris) was a French screenwriter, novelist, and journalist. Primarily a novelist until the 1940s, he was known mainly as a screenwriter after 1945, often collaborating with Jean Aurenche. In his 1954 article Une Certaine Tendance du Cinéma Français ("A Certain Trend of French Cinema"), François Truffaut attacked the current state of French films, singling out certain screenwriters and producers. The screenwriting team of Bost and Aurenche were criticized for their style of literary adaptations in particular, which Truffaut consid...

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Love Is My Profession

Love Is My Profession

1958 ★ 6.8
Writer

A petty criminal aged 22, the attractive Yvette is caught after robbing a watchmaker's shop with a toy pistol and felling his old wife. To defend her, she asks for André Gobillot, a leading member of the Paris bar. Telling him she has no money to pay him, she lifts her skirt to show him her goods. Accepting the deal, he arranges a false witness and after getting her acquitted instals her in a small hotel. His childless wife Viviane realises what is happening but hopes the improbable affair will not last. Knowing nothing about the girl, Gobillot has first to wean her off drink and drugs. He also doesn't know that she is still entertaining her current lover, an impoverished medical student called Mazetti. As Gobillot's obsession grows, his wife gets more alarmed and an enquiry is opened into his bribing the witness who lied. When Yvette tells him she is pregnant, he is overjoyed and books a holiday for the two of them. Before they leave, Yvette cannot resist one last visit to Mazetti's sordid room where, enraged with jealousy, he cuts her throat. It is not stated whether Gobillot's wife will take him back or if he will still be able to practise law. En Cas de Malheur, literally "in case of accident," is better known by its American title, Love is My Profession. By any name, this Brigitte Bardot vehicle ran into stiff opposition from the Catholic Legion of Decency, severely limiting its U.S. distribution. Bardot plays a nubile small-time thief named Yvette, who becomes the mistress of influential defense attorney Andre (Jean Gabin). Though Andre is able to shower Yvette with jewels and furs, he cannot "buy" her heart, and thus it is that it belongs to handsome young student Mazzetti (Franco Interlenghi). Alas, Yvette is no judge of human nature: attractive though Mazzetti can be, he has a dangerous-and deadly-side. En Cas de Malheur contains a nude scene that has since been reprinted in freeze-frame form innumerable times by both film-history books and girlie magazines.

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Career Highlights Top 6 by popularity · TMDB

Filmography

47 credits
2010s 1 credit
2010
Jean Aurenche, écrivain de cinéma as Self (archive footage)
Movie
Crew Credits
1980s 1 credit
1984
Movie ★ 6.9
1970s 4 credits
1976
Movie ★ 6.8
1974
Movie ★ 6.9
1973
Movie ★ 6.0
1973
TV ★ 10.0
1960s 10 credits
1968
Movie ★ 6.3
1965
Movie ★ 2.0
1964
Movie ★ 7.8
1963
Enough Rope Screenplay
Movie ★ 5.7
1962
Crime Does Not Pay Scenario Writer
Movie ★ 5.1
1961
Rendezvous Screenplay
Movie ★ 6.2
1961
Movie ★ 7.8
1961
Movie ★ 6.1
1960
Movie
1950s 18 credits
1959
Movie ★ 6.0
1958
Movie ★ 6.4
1958
Movie ★ 6.3
1956
Movie ★ 7.3
1956
Gervaise Writer
Movie ★ 6.7
1955
Movie ★ 6.7
1955
Movie ★ 6.7
1954
Movie ★ 6.2
1954
Movie ★ 4.0
1954
Movie ★ 5.8
1954
Movie ★ 5.8
1953
Movie ★ 6.4
1953
Movie ★ 6.6
1952
Movie ★ 7.8
1952
Movie ★ 5.9
1951
The Red Inn Screenplay
Movie ★ 6.8
1950
God Needs Men Screenplay
Movie ★ 6.2
1950
Movie ★ 5.6
1940s 13 credits
1949
Movie ★ 6.2
1949
Movie ★ 6.5
1947
Movie ★ 6.2
1947
Movie ★ 10.0
1946
Movie ★ 6.2
1946
Homeland Dialogue
Movie ★ 5.0
1944
Movie ★ 6.0
1943
Douce Adaptation
Movie ★ 7.2
1943
Douce Dialogue
Movie ★ 7.2
1943
Douce Screenplay
Movie ★ 7.2
1943
Movie
1943
Movie
1942
Movie ★ 4.3