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- Rien ne va plus OR No more bets OR the die are cast OR: Explanation: In an older text, in a European casino (in most languages), or in an upscale joint, the French is still used in roulettes, as well as traditionally in 37 slot roulettes. Vegas uses 38 slots, as well as 'No more bets' at most tables.
- So folgt auf les rote Rien immer roulette Schwarze. Lediglich die Null unterbricht diesen Wechsel der Farben. Beim roulette rockstar Roulette wird der Wechsel durch insgesamt zwei Nullen plus. Die Anordnung der sont Zahlen auf dem Kessel ist jedoch unterschiedlich und somit rien in jedem Casino gleich. Roulette Rien Ne Va Plus - rien ne va plus.
- View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2000 CD release of Rien Ne Va Plus on Discogs.
Mar 30, 2017 The origin goes back as far as to Ancient Rome and the sentence “Alea iacta est.”, literally meaning “The dice has been cast.” The sentence was attributed to Caesar, the Roman Emperor, by Suetonius: When Caesar had crossed the Rubicon with his arm.
The Swindle | |
---|---|
Directed by | Claude Chabrol |
Produced by | Marin Karmitz |
Written by | Claude Chabrol |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Eduardo Serra |
Edited by | Monique Fardoulis |
| |
104 minutes | |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | $9.1 million |
Box office | $7.9 million[1] |
The Swindle (French: Rien ne va plus) is a 1997 French crime-comedy film directed by Claude Chabrol that starred Michel Serrault and Isabelle Huppert.[2]
Plot[edit]
Victor and Betty are small-time confidence tricksters operating from a camper van who specialise in business conventions. Betty lures a delegate to a hotel room, where she slips him knock-out drops. Victor then joins her and they go through his cash, cheques, credit cards and passport. Victor's golden rule is never to be greedy, instead taking just a bit from each victim.
Betty enjoys exercising her powers of attraction, however, and gets more ambitious. She starts an affair with Maurice, who is a courier for money launderers and has to deliver an attaché case to the Caribbean. Victor reluctantly joins her plot, and they switch Maurice's case, which contains 5 million Swiss francs, for an identical case they have filled with newspaper. When Maurice's contacts find they have been swindled, they first torture him to death and then go looking for Victor and Betty. After the two have undergone some brutal questioning, they hand over the right case with 2.8 million Swiss francs in it. Fooled by Victor's golden rule, the gangsters let the pair go.
Victor, cross with Betty for stepping out of their league and endangering their lives, disappears with the 2.2 million Swiss francs he kept. She tracks him down at his Swiss hideaway and in the end the two make it up.
Rien Ne Va Plus Meaning
Cast[edit]
- Isabelle Huppert as Elizabeth / Betty
- Michel Serrault as Victor
- François Cluzet as Maurice Biagini
- Jean-François Balmer as Monsieur K
- Jackie Berroyer as Robert Chatillon
- Jean Benguigui as Guadeloupe Gangster
- Mony Dalmès as Signora Trotti (as Mony Dalmes)
- Thomas Chabrol as Swiss Desk Clerk
- Yves Verhoeven as Pickpocket
- Henri Attal as Greek Vendor
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Rien Ne Va Plus
- ^JP. 'Rien ne va plus (The Swindle) (1997)- JPBox-Office'. www.jpbox-office.com. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- ^Maslin, Janet. 'NY Times: The Swindle'. NY Times. Retrieved 29 May 2010.
External links[edit]
- The Swindle on IMDb
Rien Ne Va Plus Translation
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