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P?p? le Moko: Blame it on the Casbah.
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Inspecteur Slimane: Le Moko? The prince of the plunders! Fifteen convictions, 33 daylight robberies, two bank hold-ups and how about burglaries? We haven't enough fingers in this room on which to count them all! How could he not be admired?
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P?p? le Moko: Our friend Slimane is funny! He means it! He wants to arrest me! Delusions of the grandeur. Inspecteur Slimane: I'll get you! It's written! P?p? le Moko: Sure, sure, sure, sure. Inspecteur Slimane: You're funny! P?p? le Moko: How much time will I have? Inspecteur Slimane: Consult a fortune teller.
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Chef Inspecteur Louvain: But can we trust you? No double-dealing? R?gis: Sir, I am an informer not a hypocrite.
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In?s: [shouting to P?p?] Luck be with you, P?p?! Gaby Gould: What an amazing fellow! Inspecteur Slimane: Isn't he? I think it's over I'll take you back to your friends. Gaby Gould: With pleasure, I lost my friends. Inspecteur Slimane: They must have gone home... Isn't P?p? Le Moko amusing? Gaby Gould: He's entering but you won't arrest him. Inspecteur Slimane: I've written the date of his arrest on the wall where the sun shines.
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L'Arbi: I told you the truth! P?p? le Moko: Find another truth! L'Arbi: It's the truth. P?p? le Moko: Shut up! L'Arbi: I swear on my father head! P?p? le Moko: No risk! He was guillotined.
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Amazon.com
Jean Gabin was a brooding, rough, working-class antihero in France when his role as cool master criminal Pepe Le Moko made him an international star. In the Casbah of French Morocco, an underworld slum of winding alleys dotted with tiny rooms, bars, and hideouts, Gabin's Pepe is the prince of the criminal jungle while at the same time its prisoner. He's safe only as long as he remains in this world the local gendarmes can't penetrate. During a clumsy police raid, he meets a lovely Parisian (the exotic Mirielle Balin) adorned in expensive jewelry, but in the midst of flirting, his eyes leave her baubles and meet her gaze. Pepe falls in love and Moroccan Inspector Slimane, the only cop to have earned his respect, makes this new chink in Pepe's armor the center of his plan to capture the Casbah's most notorious gentleman thief. Gabin is marvelous as the confident yet restless Pepe, a cultured man--equal parts elegance and edgy brutality; at home in this urban jungle, but restless to escape. Julien Divivier's romantic crime classic is a prime example of French poetic realism (a precursor to American film noir, shot in a shadowy style enhanced by the claustrophobic rooms and crowded streets. It's a world where friendship and trust are everything, yet betrayal and duplicity await around every dark corner, and Pepe exacts a harsh justice on those who defy his code. Hollywood remade the film as Algiers with continental heartthrob Charles Boyer in Gabin's role. --Sean Axmaker
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