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Hotel Paradiso by Peter Glenville
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Product detailsActor: Alec Guinness, Gina Lollobrigida, Peggy Mount, Robert Morley Director: Peter Glenville Edition: VHS Tape Audio: English (Original Language) Format: NTSC Running Time: 96 minutes Audience Rating: Unrated Publisher: MGM/UA Home Video Studio: MGM/UA Home Video
VHS Movie Reviews of Hotel ParadisoMovie Review: Classic French Farce Summary: 5 StarsMonsieur Feydeau has writer's block, and he needs a new play. But he takes an opportunity to observe the upper class of 1900 Paris - Monsieur Boniface with a domineering wife, and the next-door neglectful husband Henri with a beautiful but ignored wife Marcelle. Henri traces architectural anomalies (most ghost sounds are drains), and plans a night at the Hotel Paradiso; but this hotel is the assignation spot of Marcelle and Boniface. One wife, two husbands, a nephew, and the perky Boniface maid, all at this 'by the hour' hotel, and consummation of the affair is, to say the least, severely compromised (not the least by a police raid). All of this under Feydeau's eye, and his play is the 'success fou' of the next season. [This material is from a film database--not a personal review.]
Movie Review: Ah...those were the days! Summary: 4 StarsI very much like this film and anxiously wait to have it in DVD format. Not only is it masterfully acted and directed, but the art direction and the costume design are perfect to the tiniest detail. Besides, everything is enhanced by superb cinematography and an intelligent music score. The film lovingly recreates the atmosphere of 'belle-epoque' Paris, making it a delight to watch. And we can see how much fun the actors were having with the material.
Movie Review: OK Alec Guinness bedroom farce, worth watching mostly for Gina Summary: 3 StarsThis movie is based on one of Feydeau's farces, which were popular in France at the turn of the century. The story is essentially quite simple, centering on Alec Guinness' bumbling efforts to seduce his lovely neighbor (Gina Lollobrigida, with much lighter-colored hair than usual) in a local hotel known as the "Hotel Paradiso". Things get rather confusing and chaotic as people dash in and out of rooms in various states of undress and discombobulation. It's not bad, but it's not really that great either; what makes it worth watching is, of course, the ultra-scrumptious La Lollo.
Movie Review: A First-Rate French Farce! Summary: 5 StarsBased on a play, Hotel Paradiso is a classic, light-hearted, and absolutely delightful French farce set in turn-of-the-century Paris. The actual storyline is very basic (ie. a married man seeking an evening of romance with a married woman); indeed, it must be basic to possibly allow for the complexity of the situations in which the characters find themselves and each other, the misinterpretations, and the elaborate (and comical) explanations that result. Never was the phrase, "Oh what a tangled web we weave" more appropriate than when applied here.There are two things that really make this production shine, however. First of all, there are no loose ends. Not only does every character have a role to play, but every single incident that occurs happens for a reason; no scenes have been included whimsically and without purpose. The story at times appears to be coming apart at the seams through misunderstandings and the entailing confusion, but such is in reality an intricately calculated illusion, for this is actually an extremely tightly-woven, carefully-controlled, and well-orchestrated production. It is thoroughly enjoyable for being so well-written, but it is all the more so for being so consummately acted by an ensemble which includes some of Britain's finest. By way of introduction and to give some idea of what to expect, M. Boniface (superbly played by Alec Guinness) fancies his next-door neighbour's wife, Mme. Cote (Gina Lollobrigida). With Mme. Boniface (a battle-axe of a wife) away for the evening and M. Cote (an architect) away on business for the night, M. Boniface seizes the opportunity to instigate a romantic liaison with Mme. Cote. But where to meet? Well, Mme. Boniface has just received a flyer advertising the newly-opened (and disreputable) Hotel Paradiso. While telling her husband of this disgraceful hotel, Mme. Boniface gives the flyer to her maid, Victoire (a very young Ann Beach--Fresh Field's "Sonya") to dispose of. (Victoire, by the way, has taken a fancy to M. Cote's nephew Maxim (a very young Derek Fowlds--Yes Minister's "Bernard").) In short, M. Boniface has found a place for his tryst with Mme. Cote (unaware that it is to this hotel that M. Cote's business has taken him). As if that`s not enough, M. Martin, a friend of the Bonifaces, has arrived unexpectedly with his four daughters, but he must now find a hotel as the Bonifaces haven't enough room. M. Martin overhears Mme. Cote as she confirms the name and address of the hotel and thinks she is recommending it to him. And so the stage is set for what can only be described as a very fast-paced (indeed frantic) and very, very funny evening. One final character that I ought to mention is the police inspector. The role is not a large one, but it's wonderfully played by the late Leonard Rossiter (Rising Damp, Reggie Perrin). In conclusion, this is a splendid film, and it is sure to be enjoyed by fans of British comedy, for it is the stuff of which so much British comedy is made. It is well written, splendidly acted, and very funny--indeed, what more can one ask of a comedy? Highly recommended!
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