La Villa Santo-Sospir (1952) is a 35-minute amateur or home film directed by Jean Cocteau in which Cocteau takes the viewer on a tour of Francine Weisweiller's villa on the French coast, a major location later used in his film Testament of Orpheus (1960).
Santo Domingo | Aston Villa F.C. | University of Santo Tomas | Espírito Santo | Pancho Villa | Heitor Villa-Lobos | Villa Park | Pancho Villa Expedition | Santo Antão | Roman villa | Villa Tunari | Santo Tomás District | Santo Antão, Cape Verde | David Villa | Villa Savoye | Villa San Giovanni | Villa Medici | Santo Tomás District, Chumbivilcas | Espiritu Santo | Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo | Santo Cilauro | Santo Ângelo | Villa Pisani | Villa Clara Province | Rector Magnificus of the University of Santo Tomas | Villa d'Este | Villa Crespo | Villa Arson | Villa Argentina | Santo Tomás District, Luya |
Francine Weisweiller and Jean Cocteau became close friends, with Cocteau and some of his entourage living with her in her villa Santo Sospir at Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat from 1950 to the early 1960s.