Jean Gabin was the king of the good word in the cinema, notably thanks to Michel Audiard who wrote them to him. Back on a cult replica of the film “Le Pacha”, signed Georges Lautner.
Michel Audiard signed among the best dialogues of French cinema during the 1950s to 80s. Thirty years in which he notably made Jean-Paul Belmondo and his favorite actor Jean Gabin talks about a lot. One of their most abundant collaborations is undoubtedly the pasha, produced by Georges Lautner.
Gabin/Audiard, winning duo!

Gaumont
In this film, the divisional commissioner Louis Joss is placed on a hold-up affair whose brain began to eliminate the participants, starting with Albert Gouvion (Robert Dalban), a corrupt police inspector. Joss then goes into personal revenge to bring down the culprit.
And if the pasha contains a number of cult replicas including this on the “idiots” dear to Audiard, it has another sentence whose universalism still leaves speechless.
We can hear it in a sequence located about 1 hour of film, the commissioner Joss played by Jean Gabin chats at the post with Nathalie Villar (Dany Carrel), mistress of Albert “Les Galoches” and linked to a hold-up which cost the life of a police inspector friend of Joss.
The commissioner decides to use Nathalie to trap the head of the whole combination, Quinquin (André Pousse). For this, he offers the young woman to go to the ugly and to offer her to reach “2 billion”.
“Do you think he will listen to me?” replies with a resigned air Nathalie, convinced that she will “make herself come up”. To which Commissioner Joss responds, with the banter and the unshakable confidence that Gabin could transmit:
“Oh, you know, when we speak Pognon, from a number everyone listens.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrmgpfoss7c
It is necessary to recognize that Michel Audiard not only has the meaning of the formula, but the ability to find sentences that cross eras. Thus, this replica of a 1968 film is still perfectly topical, as its universality will speak to everyone.
What is your favorite replica by Jean Gabin? Check, it is surely signed Audiard!