Keep Talking, Baby

1961 [FRENCH]

Action / Crime / Drama

IMDb Rating 6.3/10 10 69 69

Please enable your VPΝ when downloading torrents

If you torrent without a VPΝ, your ISP can see that you're torrenting and may throttle your connection and get fined by legal action!

Get Hide VPΝ

Plot summary

Ex-boxer Eddie is framed for murder. While serving time, he tries to clear his name and uncover the real culprit behind the deadly setup.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 07, 2024 at 06:49 AM

Director

Top cast

720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
804.88 MB
1280*768
French 2.0
NR
us  fr  de  es  ro  ar  
25 fps
1 hr 27 min
Seeds ...
1.46 GB
1800*1080
French 2.0
NR
us  fr  de  es  ro  ar  
25 fps
1 hr 27 min
Seeds 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by zutterjp48 7 / 10

A pleasant action film.

Jackson, a former circus artist and ventriloquist has escaped from prison and he now looking for the people who sent him prison. He manages to find Sophie, the little daughter of Françoise who has been injured by some henchmen. Then we follow the tribulations of Jackson and the little Sophie through Paris , the empty theater, Jackson dancing tap dance, the club of Robert Simon,-the honest fruit grocer and club manager, the discovery of the drug traffic , the meeting with the police officer and other adventures.

I enjoyed the performances of Eddie Constantine, François Chaumette and Renée Cosima.

Reviewed by / 10

Reviewed by zardoz-13 7 / 10

Contrived but Entertaining Wrongly Accused Thriller

"Why Women Sin" director Guy Lefranc's cute, clever, but contrived crime thriller "Keep Talking Baby" casts tough guy Eddie Constantine as a ventriloquist on the run from not only the French police but also a murderous gang of thugs who traffick in opium. These thugs framed him for a murder he didn't commit. This nimble 91-minute cat & mouse epic unfolds with Jackson (Constantine of "Poison Ivy") receiving a 20-year stretch in the slammer because two eye witnesses testified against him. Miraculously, our resourceful hero manages to escape from prison after dark two days later! However, Lefranc provides no details about Jackson's escape, except that he leaped from a wall and fled down a dark street. Presumably, he could have deployed his ventriloquist skills to distract and confuse his jailors. Our desperate protagonist searches for the two witnesses that sealed his fate. Not surprisingly, organized crime coerced him into testifying against Jackson. Reluctantly, Delmar babbles about the mob that railroaded Jackson. Meanwhile, Francoise (Renée Cosima of "The Sinners") feared for the welfare of her own daughter. Naturally, the mobsters knock off Delmar. The buffoon had rushed to their headquarters and confessed his indiscretions about the smugglers with Jackson. Meantime, Francoise had the most to dread. The unscrupulous gangsters threatened to harm her precious adolescent daughter. Jackson and Francoise are leaving her apartment building when one of the villains spots them. The villain fires at Jackson, but Francoise hurls her body like a shield against him to absorb the bullets meant for our hero. Predictably, when the police arrive, all eye witnesses say Jackson was responsible for shooting Francoise. She lands in the hospital. Before Jackson has to leave her, she tells him to take care of her adolescent daughter Sophie. Lefranc and co-scenarists Roger Boussinot, Guilles Morris Dumoulin, and Yvon Samuel adapted Day Keene's novel. The hero in "Keep Talking Baby" is a sudden outcast of society. Essentially, condemned by his own society, a wrongly accused man must exonerate himself in the eyes of the law. In other words, he must prove his innocent. Alfred Hitchcock liked this premise. Resourceful at every turn but far from believable, "Keep Talking Baby" emerges as slick, synthetic, but imaginative from fade-in to fadeout as Jackson eludes the bad guys. Our hero spends most of his time with Francoise's daughter in tow with her huge stuff bunny rabbit. Meantime, an older detective doesn't believe in Jackson's guilt while the police commissioner is inclined to believe our hero represents a threat to society. Lefranc teamed up with Constantine again in "Laissez tirer les tireurs" (1964) for a more conventional secret agent saga.

Read more IMDb reviews

No comments yet

Be the first to leave a comment