The love affairs of three young Englishmen at a language cramming school in the south of France. Diana, the sister of one of the boys, arrives in town to flirt with all of her brothers' scho... Read allThe love affairs of three young Englishmen at a language cramming school in the south of France. Diana, the sister of one of the boys, arrives in town to flirt with all of her brothers' schoolmates.The love affairs of three young Englishmen at a language cramming school in the south of France. Diana, the sister of one of the boys, arrives in town to flirt with all of her brothers' schoolmates.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- The Schoolgirl
- (uncredited)
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The story is about young men enrolled and living in Professor Maingot's French language school for English gentlemen. They are businessmen, scholars and others who are there to learn French in a cram course. But studying at Maingot's Villa Miramar soon takes a back seat when student Kenneth Lake's sister, Diana, comes to visit.
Ellen Drew plays the flirtatious Diana superbly. She immediately wraps two of the young men around her finger. David Tree plays the puppy-dog smitten Chris Neilan, much to the dismay of Jacqueline Maingot. She is the professor's daughter who is in love with Chris. The other is Brian Curtis, played by Guy Middleton, who's more of a ladies man than a businessman.
The new student arrival, British Navy Commander Bill Rogers, soon falls under Diana's spell. Roland Culver plays the snobby, stuffed shirt seaman perfectly. And, Diana has little trouble also wrapping him around her finger. When the alluring Diana asks if the ship picture on the wall was of his "boat," Rogers swallows hard, smiles and acknowledges that it is a picture of his "boat."
Only one of the adult male students isn't taken in by the wily and sly - but admittedly very attractive and alluring Diana. Ray Milland plays Alan Howard delightfully. Perhaps his reluctance and guard were raised because he had to give up his private room for the new guest. His bed is now a cot in Brian's room.
The plot has several scenarios with Diana and her different men. Chris and Bill nearly come to blows over the blonde temptress. Amidst all this, Alan gets barbs in right and left for good laughs. While one might imagine what the outcome of this love pentagon might be, the ending is a real hoot.
This may be the best picture of an obvious flirt ever put on film. But it's done sans any immoral behavior in line with the mores of the day. And it has the trappings of wonderful satire and some very funny comedy overall.
The film has something of an historical musical note. It's the only feature film in which famous composer and orchestra leader Mantovani appears. He is in the carnival scene toward the end where he plays his violin and leads his orchestra. Mantovani provided all the music for the film, which included a very apropos and funny, short violin music background each time that Diana enters the picture. After this happens two or three times, it becomes quite noticeable as an intended little extra bit of humor.
Prior to World War II, Mantovani's orchestra was the most popular musical entertainment in England. His trademark style with cascading strings was especially effective with romantic songs. By the late 20th century, The Beatles would become Great Britain's famous musical group. But before the 1960s, Mantovani was the first musical performer in the U. K. to sell more than one million stereo albums. And, in 1959, his was the first to have six albums in the U. S. Top 30 at the same time.
This is a wonderful, very funny movie with lots of light satire. While there's nothing that would make it unsuitable for all ages, it will be most appreciated by mature audiences, especially those who enjoy cloaked comedy and clever lines.
The film is loaded with humorous dialog. Here are some favorite lines. For more, see the Quotes section under this IMDb Web page of the film.
Prof. Maingot, "Monsieur Howard, please answer the phone. I am busy with a poor young idiot."
Diana Lake, "But aren't you going to protect me?" Alan Howard, "Protect you? Protect Brian, you mean."
Cmdr. Bill Rogers, "Oh, is she learning French too?" Alan, "Uh, no. She just stopped us from doing it."
Commander, "Uh, what you're implying is that this girl is, uh, rather fast?" Alan, "Well, I'm not implying it, I'm saying it."
Commander, "How do you do." Diana, "Oh, I had no idea you were arriving this morning." Alan, "Hadn't you? You asked me what train he was coming by."
Alan, "She loves getting innocent young men into cold water." Commander, "Well, personally, I rather like an early morning dip." Alan, "An early morning dip?"
Alan, "I bet you didn't go in the water."... Diana, "Yes, I did. Ask Chris."
Alan, "Uh, Chris, did Diana go into the water? Chris, "No, why?" Diana, "Why, Chris." Alan, "Chris! You of all people - an early morning dipper."
Alan, to Chris, "Why, I believe this girl could make you go for a bicycle tour in the Pyrenees, if she set her mind to it." Commander, "I once went for a bicycle tour in the Pyrenees." Alan, "Really?"
Diana, "What did you mean by hanky-panky?" Alan, "I should tell you?"
Diana, "Allen, much as I like you, there are times when I could cheerfully strangle you." Allan, "Is this one of them, darling?" Diana, "Yes, Ducky, it is." Allan, "That's just what I'd hoped."
Diana, "Well, he's really very nice, but you mustn't take everything he says too seriously, because you see, he's just a teeny bit, you know, unbalanced," pointing to her head.
Diana, "But if he tries to give you the impression that I'm a scheming wrecker of men's lives, you needn't necessarily believe him."
Diana, "But cruelty is something that's physically impossible for me."
The story is about a bunch of Brits living in France in order to take a language immersion program. Oddly, most of these folks didn't seem to care at all about learning the language and they seemed annoying because of this. The one big exception was Alan (Milland), who is the wise man in the program. He is not only working on his French but seems to know women...and watches as two of the residents of the program throw themselves at a pretty but manipulative woman. Will he, too, be able to withstand her charms?
To me, this film is enjoyable but dated. After all, a bunch of rather xenophobic Brits not bothering to learn French seems like a commentary about the British Empire of the time. The film also is a bit slow...but watchable if you are a patient viewer.
'French Without Tears' (Rattigan's first successful play) is not my favourite of Rattigan's plays, or one of them. Do prefer 'The Winslow Boy', 'Separate Tables' and particularly 'The Browning Version' myself. Despite the story being flimsier than those three, and it doesn't lend itself as well to more cinematic film adaptations, faring much better to me with a live audience, the light as soufflé and mostly quite sophisticated comedy and the meat of the writing and characterisation still remains.
While not one of the best film adaptations of Terence Rattigan about, this 'French Without Tears' is a highly enjoyable and criminally underseen version of the play. Is the story fluffy and on the flimsy side? Sure, but it is also one of the more accessible stories of Rattigan's work subject matter-wise. Is it old fashioned? In a way, though modern audiences probably would get into it easily knowing what to expect. Does 'French Without Tears' work better on stage with a live audience? To me it does. Does that mean that it doesn't work at all as a film? Of course not, but other Rattigan plays fare better on cinematic terms, judging from director Anthony Asquith's later Rattigan film adaptations 'The Browning Version' and 'The Winslow Boy' (both even better) for example.
This film of 'French Without Tears' looks lovely, with suitably intimate and beautifully composed photography and sumptuous costumes and sets. The star in this regard is David Lean's (yes that David Lean, before he went on to even greater things) editing, especially in the carnival scene. The music is energetic and is pleasantly orchestrated.
Furthermore, the script does capture the play's wit and zest, not all but for stage-to-film translations enough of it does do, Rattigan's gift for light humour, writing that provokes thought and a darkly painful side, which brings complexity and dimension to the subject matter, and his attention to meaty characterisation still shines, even if the story still feels flimsy, the humour sparkling and as light as a souflee and other parts are very sophisticated.
Charm, heart and zest is all over 'French Without Tears', which flies by and while it is a very short film (just over an hour) one wishes a little when it's over that there was more. The highlight is the drunk scene which is hilarious. Asquith does a great job directing, very assured while understanding the intimacy of the relationship between dialogue, camera and acting.
Of the splendid cast, Ray Milland and Roland Culver, both on very natural, sparkling form, are the standouts. Ellen Drew is very charming, one can totally see what the characters see in her.
In summation, hugely enjoyable and should be made available on DVD. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Did you know
- TriviaOne of over 700 Paramount productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, which were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution, and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since; its earliest documented telecast took place in Denver Wednesday 22 July 1959 on KBTV (Channel 9).
- Quotes
Cmdr. Bill Rogers: Diana?
Alan Howard: Kenneth Lake's sister.
Cmdr. Bill Rogers: Oh, is she learning French too?
Alan Howard: Uh, no. She just stopped us from doing it.
- ConnectionsVersion of BBC Play of the Month: French Without Tears (1976)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1