Two years later he made his international box-office breakthrough as " Julien Tavernier " in Malle's first feature film, " Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud " ( " Elevator to the Gallows ", 1958 ).
12.
This album, one of the least-known recordings of Miles Davis, was recorded at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam on December 8, 1957, a couple of days after the recording of the movie soundtrack " Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud ".
13.
The film, " Ascenseur pour l'Echafaud " ( " Elevator to the Gallows " ), with its brilliant jazz score by Miles Davis, starred Jeanne Moreau as a woman who conspires with her lover to kill her rich husband.
14.
Among those in the first row was the tearful Miss Moreau, who he made a star in his 1957 New Wave classic " Ascenseur Pour l'Echafaud " ( " Elevator to the Gallows " or " Frantic " ).
15.
Among those in the first row was the tearful Miss Moreau, whom he made a star in his 1957 New Wave classic " Ascenseur Pour l'Echafaud " ( " Elevator to the Gallows " or " Frantic " ).
16.
Davis played some gigs at the Cafe Bohemia with a short-lived formation that included Sonny Rollins and drummer Art Taylor, and then traveled to France, where he recorded the score to Louis Malle's film " Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud ".
17.
Since that album consists of ten songs from the soundtrack for the film " Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud ", Jazz Track redirects to the soundtrack article Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud ( soundtrack ) .-- talk 16 : 53, 8 June 2010 ( UTC)
18.
Since that album consists of ten songs from the soundtrack for the film " Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud ", Jazz Track redirects to the soundtrack article Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud ( soundtrack ) .-- talk 16 : 53, 8 June 2010 ( UTC)
19.
He worked as the co-director and cameraman to Ascenseur pour l'�chafaud " in 1957 ( released in the U . K . as " Lift to the Scaffold " and in the U . S . originally as " Frantic ", later as " Elevator to the Gallows " ).
20.
The city early on adopted jazz as a spiritual cause, and it was manifested in French films-- the soundtrack for Louis Malle's " Ascenseur Pour l'Echafaud, " with its chillingly moody music by Miles Davis, or Jean-Luc Godard's " Breathless, " with music by Martial Solal.