Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Paris Holiday (1958 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1958 film by Gerd Oswald
For the 2015 film, seeParis Holiday (2015 film).
Paris Holiday
Film poster
Directed byGerd Oswald
Written byBob Hope(story)
Edmund Beloin
Dean Riesner
Produced byBob Hope
C.R. Foster-Kemp(associate)
StarringBob Hope
Fernandel
Anita Ekberg
Martha Hyer
CinematographyRoger Hubert
Edited byEllsworth Hoagland
Music byJoseph J. Lilley(score)
Jimmy Van Heusen(song-music)
Sammy Cahn
(song-lyrics)
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release dates
  • February 27, 1958 (1958-02-27) (world premiere, London)
  • March 28, 1958 (1958-03-28) (Los Angeles)
Running time
103 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.5 million[1]

Paris Holiday is a 1958 Americanaction comedy film, starringBob Hope, which was directed byGerd Oswald, and written byEdmund Beloin andDean Riesner from a story by Hope. The film also features French comedianFernandel,Anita Ekberg andMartha Hyer, and a rare appearance by writer/directorPreston Sturges. The film was shot inTechnirama andTechnicolor inParis and in the French village ofGambais.

The film initially focuses on an American comedian who is traveling to France to meet with ascreenwriter. He is wrongly suspected by secret agents to be transporting incriminatingmanuscripts. In Paris, the screenwriter is murdered and the comedian is arrested as a murder suspect. The local authorities use him as bait for the actual criminals, and he is soon chased all over Paris by the criminal underworld.

Plot

[edit]

Popular American comedian Bob Hunter (Bob Hope), star of stage, movies and television, boards the luxury linerSS Île de France to travel to France, only to find his French counterpart, Fernydel (Fernandel) is on the ship as well. Also on board are elegant blonde diplomat Ann McCall (Martha Hyer), whom Bob would like to get to know better, and stunning Zara Brown (Anita Ekberg), the agent for a French criminal organization which suspects that Bob is carrying an incriminating manuscript. While Bob pursues Ann, with Fernydel's help, Zara repeatedly searches Bob's stateroom, causing problems when Ann sees her leaving after a search.

When he reaches Paris, Bob visits Serge Vitry (Preston Sturges), a writer whose script Bob has come to purchase, but is told that Vitry is no longer interested in comedy: he is writing a true-life drama which he is going to produce himself. Bob pleads for a look, and is told where he can get a translated copy. A series of suspicious accidents and mishaps then leads to Bob being arrested as a suspect in the murder of Serge, but he is rescued by the American ambassador (André Morell) and Inspector Dupont (Yves Brainville), who tell him that Serge used his manuscript to reveal the identities of counterfeiters who had infiltrated their way into high offices in the French government, which is why he was murdered. The two men ask Bob to serve as bait to flush out the criminals. Bob agrees, but only because Ann's life is also in danger. Helped by Ann, Fernandel, and villainess-turned-heroine Zara, Bob is chased all over Paris by the underworld, at one point winding up in a mental asylum for safekeeping. It all ends with an escape by helicopter piloted by Fernandel (actually John Crewdson) reading a book of flight instructions, capture of a group of assassins, then a parade for Bob, Fernandel and Ann, who are heroes.[2][3][4]

Cast

[edit]

Cast notes:

  • Bob Hope's character is named "Robert Leslie Hunter", although he is always referred to as "Bob Hunter" in the film. Hope's real name is Leslie Townes Hope.[5]
  • This was writer/director Preston Sturges' fourth and last on-screen appearance in a feature film. Sturges did a walk-on in his 1940 filmChristmas in July ("Man at shoeshine stand"), played the small part of a film director in hisSullivan's Travels (1941), and appeared as himself inParamount's 1942 all-star extravaganzaStar Spangled Rhythm.
  • Hope and Sturges had worked together almost 20 years earlier, when Sturges was one of the writers onNever Say Die (1939), one of Hope's first hits.

Songs

[edit]
  • "Paris Holiday" - byJimmy Van Heusen (music) andSammy Cahn (lyrics), sung behind the credits by a chorus
  • "Nothing in Common" - by Jimmy Van Heusen (music) and Sammy Cahn (lyrics), sung by Bob Hope and Martha Hyer, but cut from the film[6]

Other songs that appear:[7]

Production

[edit]

Paris Holiday had the working title of "Trouble in Paris".[5]

Although Hope initiated production of the film, and came up with the story idea, the intent for the film to be a showcase for both himself and Fernandel is indicated by the opening credits, where Hope's name and Fernandel take turns being listed first.[5]

The film was in production in France from early April to late June 1957[8] Originally filming took place theBoulogne Studios before moving to theJoinville Studios due to delays. Location shooting took place in Paris, and in the village ofGambais.[5] The film's World Premiere took place in England on 27 February 1958 at the London Pavilion theatre with Bob Hope and Fernandel in attendance. It opened inLos Angeles on 28 March 1958,[8] and went into general release shortly after. It was marketed with the tagline:The Comedy Team Of The Century.[9]

Hope described the difficulties involved in producingParis Holiday in his bookI Owe Russia $1200.

Hope andBing Crosby recorded two songs written for the movie - "Paris Holiday" and "Nothing in Common" - forUnited Artists Records in February 1958. Crosby did not appear in the movie.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Top Grossers of 1958".Variety. 7 January 1959. p. 48. Please note figures are for US and Canada only and are domestic rentals accruing to distributors as opposed to theatre gross
  2. ^TCMFull synopsis
  3. ^Erickson, HalPlot synopsis
  4. ^Crawford, RodPlot summary (IMDB)
  5. ^abcdTCMNotes
  6. ^IMDBSoundtracks
  7. ^TCMMusic
  8. ^abTCM
  9. ^IMDBTaglines

External links

[edit]
Films directed byGerd Oswald
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paris_Holiday_(1958_film)&oldid=1320133670"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp