Sirocco or The Maltese House (French: La maison du Maltais) is a 1938 French drama film directed by Pierre Chenal and starring Viviane Romance, Louis Jouvet, Pierre Renoir and Marcel Dalio. It was shot at the Saint-Maurice Studios in Paris. The film's sets were designed by the art director Georges Wakhévitch. It is an adaptation of a novel by Jean Vignaud, which had previously been made into the 1928 silent film Karina the Dancer, but made significant changed to the plot. It has been categorised as a film noir.
In the Tunisian port city of Sfax, the half Maltese Matteo meets and falls in love with Safia a prostitute. Finding herself pregnant when he is wrongly believed to have vanished at sea, she heads to Paris in the company of an archaeologist André Chervin to be his wife. Three years later Matteo arrives in Paris, but his efforts to reclaim her love are thwarted by a number of obstacles thrown in his way. These partly come from a blackmailing private detective Rossignol who Safia who had once hired to find out about Matteo, but is now threatening to expose her past. Ultimately seeing the life that Chervin can offer their young daughter, Matteo makes the self-sacrificing decision not to interfere.