Vacation time: Holiday for Lovers / Bon Voyage!
HOLIDAY FOR LOVERS. Like Disney’s BON
VOYAGE (below) this 1959 20th Century Fox family comedy (which I remember seeing as a child) starts
out fun but soon gets tedious and one ends up begging for it to stop as it
seems far too over-long and we lose patience with most of the characters. Jane
Wyman coasts in both films, as the understanding wife and mother, but gets
nothing much to do. Here, father is Clifton Webb, a consulting psychologist in Boston,
whose older daughter Meg (Jill St John) a promising sculptor if you please,
goes to Sao Paulo in Brazil
to study with famous architect, Paul Henreid. She seems to be getting involved
so parents and other daughter Carol Lynley are soon South America
bound – cue endless airplane interiors, and lots of location shooting as our
cast stand in front of lots of back projections of Sao
Paulo, as it is obvious they never left the back-lot.
Jill indeed seems smitten with the suave Henreid, but it turns out to be his boorish,
beatnik son (Nico Minardos) she is romantically involved with, while Carol
inexplicably falls for army fellow Gary Crosby. After trekking around Sao Paulo
endlessly, the family head off to Rio and we see some of the carnival (maybe
the same one used for the film BLACK ORPHEUS, also that year), and if that
wasn’t enough local colour (all that’s missing is Carmen Miranda!), then it is
off to Lima in Peru for a bull-fight. Then everything stops for a flamenco
number or two from Jose Greco and the misunderstandings get sorted out, as we
wind up in Trinidad – don’t ask! Directed by Fox
reliable Henry Levin; at least Clifton
gets to do a few South American dance steps. Fascinating though to luxuriate in air
travel as it was over 50 years ago, and Sao Paulo certainly looks great, if not
as teeming as it is these days. We like Clifton Webb a lot here at The Projector - see label, and Jane was certainly engrossing in that Sirk classic ALL THAT HEAVEN ALLOWS. she was third choice here after Gene Tierney and then Joan Fontaine both had to drop out due to health reasons (or maybe they realised they really had nothing much to do here) - it would have been nice though to have seen Gene's LAURA re-teamed with her Waldo Lydecker! while Joan could raise those eyebrows and be more acerbic than bland Jane.
BON VOYAGE!, 1962. Comic adventure awaits the Williard
family from Terre Haute, Indiana,
when Harry packs up the wife and kids and sets sail on a long-awaited “dream”
vacation to romantic France.
However, their trip includes some unforeseen adventures: his wife Katie is
pursued by a Hungarian admirer, his daughter Amy meets a brash young playboy,
and Harry himself gets hopelessly lost on a tour of the Paris
sewer system (he is a plumbing contractor)! Join the Williards for a hilarious,
whirlwind trip they’ll never forget!
So says the blurb, but this is Disney corn which at 132
minutes is way overlong, with terrible pacing from Disney hack James Neilson, but
it looks like they really went to France
on a transatlantic liner which takes up most of the first half of the film. Fred
McMurray and Jane Wyman coast on autopilot, Deborah Walley (wasn’t she a
GIDGET?) is a pallid daughter, while Disney kids Tommy Kirk and Kevin Corcoran
reprise their usual roles. Its all an over-long travelogue around Paris –
Francoise Prevost has a good moment as the coded working girl who tries to pick up Fred, and
then his son; Ivan Desny pursues Jane, Michael Callan gets to dance a bit and
finally Jessie Royce Landis has some fun as his overbearing snooty society
mother (above), while British Richard Wattis also pops up, as it all finishes up on the
Riviera.
No comments:
Post a Comment