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  1. Learn the meaning and usage of the idiom "be up to your ears in something", which means to be very busy or to have more of something than you can manage. See synonyms, antonyms, examples and translations in different languages.

  2. Up to His Ears (French: Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine or in English, "Tribulations of a Chinaman in China") is a 1965 French-Italian international co-production adventure comedy film starring Jean Paul Belmondo and Ursula Andress.

  3. Aug 15, 2014 · Directed by Phillippe De Broca (1965) Starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Ursula Andress The director of King Of Hearts delivers the goods in this zany action comedy that makes movie watching fun...

  4. Up to His Ears: Directed by Philippe de Broca. With Jean-Paul Belmondo, Ursula Andress, Maria Pacôme, Valérie Lagrange. The farcical adventures of an unhappy, sometimes suicidal, billionaire Arthur Lempereur in Hong Kong and the Himalayas.

  5. 1. Having an excessive or overwhelming amount of something. We're still unpacking our new house, so we're just up to our ears in boxes. If any of my guys get hurt at the construction site, I'll be up to my ears in paperwork. 2. Extremely busy with something; deeply or overly involved in something.

  6. If you are up to your ears in something, it is taking up all of your time, attention, or resources. 'Why don't you come with me?'—'I can't. I'm up to my ears in reports.'.

  7. Up to His Ears. 1965 · 1 hr 49 min. TV-MA. Adventure · Comedy · Foreign/International. In this madcap adventure, an unhappy millionaire travels to Hong Kong to cure his malaise. He meets a beautiful dancer who knocks him out of his funk. Starring: Jean-Paul Belmondo Ursula Andress Valéry Inkijinoff Jean Rochefort Maria Pacôme Valérie Lagrange.