Bernard Sury

Most Popular Bernard Sury Trailers

Total trailers found: 12

Life Upside Down Trailer (1964)

01 September 1964

A Paris real estate developer feels compelled to withdraw from his seemingly perfect life into a world of his own.

Let's Make a Dirty Movie Trailer (1976)

17 February 1976

A bumbling film crew attempts to make a porno movie.

The Probability Factor Trailer (1976)

07 April 1976

Fred works for an insurance company as a computer engineer. He is bored with enduring the trials of his shrewish wife, so, after using actuarial tables to calculate the most common means of death, he cleverly prepares the family bathroom and brings about her demise.

Sex-Power Trailer (1970)

17 July 1970

A young Frenchman arrives in Northern California looking to forget a lost love and ends up encountering various forms of feminine power.

The Marvelous Visit Trailer (1974)

27 November 1974

In a small French village, an angel appears disguised as a beautiful young blond.

Reflections on a Political Cinema Trailer (1978)

05 July 1978

This documentary addresses the challenges facing the Italian film industry in 1978 by focusing on th)

Act of Aggression Trailer (1975)

16 April 1975

After his wife and daughter are raped and killed by a motorbike gang, a man sets out to take revenge.

An Angel on Wheels Trailer (1959)

28 August 1959

Heralded racing driver Pierre Chaillot has never noticed the pretty young flight attendant who dotes on him adoringly.

A Woman Like Satan Trailer (1958)

19 December 1958

Handsome and rich Spanish gentleman abandons his wife and riches for his love of a young girl of poor stock who taunts and degrades him.

Monsieur Sade Trailer (1977)

19 January 1977

A film, directed by Jacques Robin opens with one "truly pornographic scene", while the rest of the footage is mostly simulated.

La Vie sentimentale de Georges le tueur Trailer (1972)

17 January 1972

A hit man fails his contracts because of a young runner.

Le candidat Trailer (1968)

01 January 1968

An imaginary election in an imaginary country, illustrating Barnave's phrase, "The grotesqueness of everyday events hides the true misfortune of passions.