This is How Movies Should Be Made
This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
View MoreYes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
View Morewhat a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
View MoreMost excellent story-telling entertainment guaranteed to deliver to the viewer a satisfaction while viewing and closure at the end gripping you all the way. While the story is excellent the star of the flick captures the part and delivers the goods on a platter. The result? Reviews like this and a bonus too. There is a statement made by a blind pianist during dinner time in the movie that was quite profound. I took note of it at the time, appreciated it and only to have it catch me off-guard at a later time and as result, pulled some well-earned tears right out of me. I leave it to you to have your own experience and will tell you no more. Nicely done to all involved. Enjoy the backgrounds of life during this time, its polite society and the social, drinking, courting and dueling of the times presented. Supporting cast was excellent and the director made certain we got all the necessary messages without asking for them. I am a fan of the classics because they have the qualities that live on in the movie world. I especially enjoy the dialogues and scenery as well as customs captured for the movie themes. Today, its all sex, killing and loud noises as if that is all there is. The classics remind us there is much more art involved and clearly no accidents either. I enjoyed a nice roast chicken which I picked on and some delicious dessert as I love eating while watching a show. This is a good movie for a favorite snacking too. Enjoy this little "affair"
View MoreDid the urbane character George Sanders get bitten by some bug while in Africa that made him decide that he needed to seduce every woman he walked by? It seems that way as he makes his way through Paris society treating street whores like a countess, and treating countesses like street whores. Of course, once he gets them, he tosses them aside as soon as his appetite is filled. That is all but one whom he can't seem to get out of his mind, and that is the graceful widow played by the magnificent Angela Lansbury. Having been the victim of Dorian Gray some two years before while Sanders watched from the sidelines, Lansbury is a lady here rather than a poor down-on-her-luck singer, yet one not so obsessed with her station in life as intently as she is on remaining true to the one man she loves. She's a widow with a sweet young daughter, and upon meeting Sanders at a dinner party given by Sanders' old pal John Carradine and his wife Ann Dvorak, she's smitten. The problem is however that so is pretty much every woman Sanders encounters, and that includes the very married Dvorak.What is the truth about Sanders' character here? That is the mystery that rolls through this somewhat over-long melodrama, sometimes slow, sometimes mesmerizing. Is Sanders a simple Don Juan, or is he a Libertine, or does he secretly hate women for some reason, wanting to break their spirits and destroy them? Look how he treats cafe singer Marie Wilson who makes a scene when he ignores her after he shows up after meeting Lansbury, having first met Wilson, insulted her publicly, then seducing her for "what the heck's" sake. He's not above seducing all the married women in society, and while his charm is obvious, it is also clear that he will never sincerely mean what he tells them. The film gives the impression that when he is seducing one woman, he's thinking of another woman in his mind, particularly Lansbury who writes him a love letter of such poetic beauty, you'd think he'd change his womanizing ways instantly. But Sanders' character is obviously insane, if not violently so, definitely a sociopath. It's watching his character rise and fall that makes this so fascinating, even if he is definitely one of the biggest rogues to be seen on screen.I wanted to see more of both Carradine and Warren William, who ironically was sort of the George Sanders of the early 30's with his ultra womanizing characters seducing then dropping practically every lady in sight. Of course, both could play the gentlemen and be noble, but villains are always more fascinating, especially if they are played with many layers. Frances Dee is excellent as a troubled married woman who allows herself to be seduced with tears behind her eyes as she realizes she's being pulled into intrigue by the devil himself. Susan Douglas also gives an excellent performance as Dee's daughter who as Sanders ages becomes the latest victim, one which will surely lead to his doom as the world catches up to his sins. This isn't an easy film to watch, but it is one that if totally alert, you can get through like you would the world's most famous epic novels. And in the end, Sanders is a character you do feel sorry for, because with someone as wonderful as Lansbury's character there pining for him, you just want him to wake up and realize the missed opportunity he's turning away from.
View Morean adaptation. and a great cast. perfect choice for Georges Duroy character. a subtle, precise, impressive George Sanders in one of his magnificent roles. so, the key is not manner to adapted the novel of Maupassant but the art of each actor. because this movie is scene for a lot of stars. the story is old but the play is new. the novel is French and the science of details and nuances makes this American movie fruit of French cinema. the tale of Bel Ami is, in great measure, grace of Sanders and his partners, slice of Dorian Gray. it is not a masterpiece but it is a very interesting lesson. to define a world, to discover a book, to escape from Nick Ormerod last adaptation spell. a film as old yellow picture. good beginning to visit a world, to joy with drops of old fashion cinema style, to rediscover few crust of emotions and reflection to our small and bleak world.
View MoreAlthough hard to get into this film, with a protagonist who is very unlikable and who, for all his scheming, seems to be falling upward in the social hiearchy more than effectively manipulating those he seeks to use, the movie is worth watching in order to contemplate the young and beautiful Angela Lansbury and the older, wiser, but still beautiful Ann Dvorak. And for the climactic duel.(And some might find the couture sufficiently haute to be worth watching.)The score by the great French composer, one of Les Six, Darius Milhaud, is pedestrian. Milhaud is not responsible for the annoying song "Bel Ami" which recurs far too often during the seemingly interminable 112 minutes of the movie in the version I saw.
View More