Film Review
Neil Simon's screen adaptation of his popular Broadway play
Barefoot in the Park offers plenty
of laughs but is somewhat shallow in its portrayal of married
life. Despite its evident feel-good quality, the film is slightly
marred by the distinct lack of chemistry between its two leads, Jane
Fonda and Robert Redford. Like the play before it, the film was
a massive hit when it was first released in 1967, grossing twenty million
dollars, ten times what it cost to make. For his directorial
debut, Gene Saks could hardly have wished for more, although he
surpassed himself in his next film,
The Odd Couple (1968).
The jokes may be a little dated (having been replicated in virtually
every domestic sitcom under the sun) but they still manage to raise a
smile, particularly as Fonda and Redford play their parts with the kind
of gusto you only expect to find at an end of year party. As
enjoyable as the leads are, the film is pretty well stolen by the
superb Charles Boyer and Mildred Natwick, who not only deliver a fair
quota of laughs but manage to make their characters stand out as being
more than just comedy caricatures.
Barefoot in the Park is a good film
to lift your spirits when you feel down in the mouth, but don't expect
it to offer any profound insights on how to save your marriage.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Paul and Corie Bratter are a pair of young newlyweds who can hardly
wait to set up home together. Unfortunately, the home that Corie
has chosen, a tiny fifth floor apartment in Greenwich Village, isn't
quite what Paul, a straitlaced trainee attorney, had in mind.
Still, despite the lack of heating, the gaping hole in the skylight,
the bedroom that is too small for a bed, the noticeable absence of a
bath, the abundance of weirdo neighbours and the flight of stairs that
looks like it was intended to train mountaineers, Paul and Corrie are
soon settled into their new home. At this point, Corrie decides
to try a little matchmaking and sets about playing Cupid for her mother
and a neighbour who has a reputation as a Bluebeard...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.