Film Review
Innocents in Paris is a
charming and enjoyable Ealing-style comedy that showcases some of the very best British
comic acting talent of its era.
The film was directed by Gordon Parry who was adept in several genres
but had a particular penchant for knockabout comedy,
evidenced by his subsequent films
Sailor Beware (1956)
and
The Navy Lark (1959).
He also directed several episodes of the popular '50s television series
The Adventures of Robin Hood starring Richard Greene.
As well as established stars such as
the inestimable Alastair Sim. Margaret Rutherford and Jimmy Edwards, there is a
plethora of bright young things who would rise to prominence in the
following decade - Laurence Harvey, Christopher Lee, Kenneth Williams,
Frank Muir and Peter Jones to name just five future stars who flit
momentarily into view.
There are also some notable French actors
in the cast - including Claude Dauphin, a popular French matinee idol
of the 1940s, and Louis de Funès, who would, a decade or two
later, become the best-loved, and best-paid, comic actor in
France. What
Innocents in Paris lacks in
sophistication and narrative coherence it more than
makes up for in charm, and with so much talent in front of the camera
it can hardly fail to entertain.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Sir Norman Barker sets out for an important economics summit in Paris,
accompanied by a party of British tourists who are about to have their
first taste of life in the French capital. Gwladys is an artist
who intends to savour the delights of the Louvre and paint in the quiet
streets of Montmartre. Ingénue Susan falls for a charming
older Frenchman, Max, whose intention of luring her back to his
apartment is thwarted when she insists of having a night out.
George Stilton is the archetypal British army captain, and proves the
fact by spending his entiire weekend in Paris in a British pub.
The night before he is to join his comrades in a procession to
commemorate the unveiling of a statue, Dicky Bird has the time of his
life at the Moulin Rouge. Scotsman Andy MacGregor discovers love
but loses his most treasured possession, his wallet, along the
way. Meanwhile, Sir Norman's desperate attempts to secure a vital
conference are thwarted by the stubborn Russian delegate,
Panitov. All appears lost until Panitov proposes an unusual
solution to Sir Norman's migraine: an evening in a Russian nightclub...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.