
Louise Créteur's husband dies on the Titanic trying to emigrate, so she must leave their boy Lucien with her old dad in Honfleur and leave the Normandy countryside for greater Paris. She becomes a maid in the run-down Villa des Roses, a dodgy pension run by crafty retired barrister Hugh Burrell and his frivolous, posh wife Olive, an international home to has-beens and would-bes. Louside becomes the lover of German painter, but fears he's not committed and has an abortion. Fa... (Full plot summary below)
Enjoy FREE movies and series with your Prime (USA) subscription or when you start a 30-day free trial!
Links compiled using automated software. Availability of offers subject to change / might be region specific / out of date.
Louise Créteur's husband dies on the Titanic trying to emigrate, so she must leave their boy Lucien with her old dad in Honfleur and leave the Normandy countryside for greater Paris. She becomes a maid in the run-down Villa des Roses, a dodgy pension run by crafty retired barrister Hugh Burrell and his frivolous, posh wife Olive, an international home to has-beens and would-bes. Louside becomes the lover of German painter, but fears he's not committed and has an abortion. Fate changes, at the eve of World War I.
Leave your thoughts about Villa Des Roses.
| Film ThreatRory L. AronskyOutside of Delpy, Henderson, and to some extent even Walter and West, "Villa Des Roses" is the worst kind of indifferent feeling one can have toward a movie. |
| User ReviewLee MMopey and overlong period piece that suggests stodgy PBS and BBC literary adaptations, Frank Van Passel's "Villa Des Roses" is yet another complicated, mostly English-lingo international coproduction rich in high-priced production values, but devoid of substance. |