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    Sunset Boulevard Tickets On Sale Now. Get the Best Seats. Only on SeatGeek. See Sunset Boulevard on Stage. Find Tickets at Our Lowest Possible Price on SeatGeek.

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  1. Sunset Boulevard (styled in the main title on-screen as SUNSET BLVD.) is a 1950 American black comedy film noir directed by Billy Wilder and co-written by Wilder and Charles Brackett. It is named after a major street that runs through Hollywood.

  2. Sunset Boulevard: Directed by Billy Wilder. With William Holden, Gloria Swanson, Erich von Stroheim, Nancy Olson. A screenwriter develops a dangerous relationship with a faded film star determined to make a triumphant return.

    • (238K)
    • Drama, Film-Noir
    • Billy Wilder
    • 1950-08-04
  3. Mar 1, 2019 · Do you remember how Sunset Boulevard ends? Norma Desmond shoots and kills the writer, a fraudster who has fallen under the spell of her charisma, just as he summons the courage to walk away. Her sycophantic butler flips.

    • 110 min
    • 78.9K
    • Joséaugustosoares
  4. Arguably the greatest movie about Hollywood, Billy Wilder's masterpiece Sunset Boulevard is a tremendously entertaining combination of noir, black comedy, and character study. Read Critics...

    • (114)
    • William Holden
    • Billy Wilder
    • Paramount Pictures
  5. Mistaken for the undertaker to a recently deceased pet chimpanzee, he is ushered in by the mysterious butler, Max Von Mayerling (Von Stroheim). Meeting the woman who owns the house, he recognizes her as long-forgotten silent-film star Norma Desmond (Swanson).

  6. Jun 27, 1999 · Billy Wilder's "Sunset Boulevard” is the portrait of a forgotten silent star, living in exile in her grotesque mansion, screening her old films, dreaming of a comeback. But it's also a love story, and the love keeps it from becoming simply a waxworks or a freak show.

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  8. www.bfi.org.uk › film › f43ad3dd-1b5b-5f19-aa10Sunset Blvd. (1950) | BFI

    Sunset Blvd. (1950) Tinseltown’s greatest self-satire, a gothic requiem for big-screen bygones and the highs of screen stardom. Narrated in flashback by the corpse of luckless screenwriter Joe Gillis (William Holden) floating facedown in a Los Angeles swimming pool, Wilder’s audaciously dark examination of the Hollywood dream factory ...