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  1. Georges Lautner (24 January 1926 – 22 November 2013) was a French film director and screenwriter, known primarily for his comedies created in collaboration with screenwriter Michel Audiard. Lautner's ventures into other genres were less successful though the thriller Le Professionnel starring Jean-Paul Belmondo was a big commercial hit in France in 1981.

  2. Georges Lautner had just begun to dabble in the film industry when he was called away to military service in Austria. He continued his exploration of cinema in the army's film unit, alongside ...

  3. Georges Lautner movie reviews & film summaries | Roger Ebert

  4. Biografia. Georges Lautner va néixer a Niça, fill de Leopold Lautner (1893-1938), joier d'origen vienès i aviador que va participar en exhibicions aèries (va ser pilot de combat durant la Primera Guerra mundial), i l'actriu Marie-Louise Vittore (que apareix amb el nom de Renée Saint-Cyr en onze pel·lícules del seu fill).

  5. Georges Lautner (French: [lotnɛʁ]; 24 January 1926 – 22 November 2013) was a French film director and screenwriter, known primarily for his comedies created in collaboration with screenwriter Michel Audiard. Lautner's ventures into other genres were less successful though the thriller Le Professionnel starring Jean-Paul Belmondo was a big commercial hit in France in 1981. He was born in Nice, the son of actress Renée Saint-Cyr.

  6. Film Review. A fter the ordeal of making Les Seins de glace (1974), director Georges Lautner was badly in need of some light relief, and this might explain why his next film, Pas de problème!, is one of his liveliest and most erratic comedies. Looking like an improvised road movie treatment of Hitchcock's The Trouble with Harry (1955), this is ...

  7. N e nous fâchons pas continued a run of popular gangster parodies that director Georges Lautner and screenwriter Michel Audiard knocked out between them in the 1960s. . Lautner and Audiard's first success had been Les Tontons flingueurs (1963), probably the best known of all French thriller parodies, followed by its equally entertaining sequel Les Barbouzes