IMDb RATING
5.9/10
575
YOUR RATING
A weekend trip to Paris affects the lives of a group of British tourists.A weekend trip to Paris affects the lives of a group of British tourists.A weekend trip to Paris affects the lives of a group of British tourists.
Gaby Bruyère
- Josette
- (as Gaby Bruyere)
Monique Gérard
- Raymonde
- (as Monique Gerard)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Half a dozen British subjects board a plane for a weekend flight to France and find themselves innocents in Paris. It's one of those movies in which several individual stories take place at a common venue, here with a mostly humorous theme. With a couple of comedy pros like Alastair Sim and Margaret Rutherford headlining the cast, Claire Bloom (fresh from her role in Chaplin's LIMELIGHT and James Copeland in more romantic plots and lesser stars to fill in the gaps, there's something for everyone.
It's a thoroughly pleasant effort with a script by Anatole de Grunewald and enough actual French talent to lend the necessary Gallic charm to the proceedings. Sim and Rutherford are, as always, delights, and the rest are amusing in their standard stories, although I can understand why the 100-minute movie is usually cut; although the subplot with Laurence Harvey as a French valet de chambre is good, the movie, as a whole, seemed to drag a bit.
It's a thoroughly pleasant effort with a script by Anatole de Grunewald and enough actual French talent to lend the necessary Gallic charm to the proceedings. Sim and Rutherford are, as always, delights, and the rest are amusing in their standard stories, although I can understand why the 100-minute movie is usually cut; although the subplot with Laurence Harvey as a French valet de chambre is good, the movie, as a whole, seemed to drag a bit.
I saw this on tv years ago but watched it today via new blu ray.
It is good fun and of interest in how it tells its story.
Even for 1953 it is cosy and unrealistic,I did not expect anything else.
But it has a lot of location filming in Paris and it looks great.
As someone obsessed with aviation history I expect they did provide meals on flights to Paris in this period.
Flying was for richer people then and this was before the jet age,the flight would have been longer than it is nowadays.
Passengers would expect food and drink on nearly all flights..
One of the reviews here made me scratch my head.
France famous for poor food produce? Really?
British airliners always crashing? Well we know about the Comet but Britain had a mighty aviation industry in the 1950s.
The French talk about the 30 glorious years of growth and prosperity after WW2.
I never found out exactly which years? 1945-1975? 1948-1978? In any case France recovered from world war 2 thanks to the Marshall plan but also to the hard work of its citizens and due to having an economic plan.
It is good fun and of interest in how it tells its story.
Even for 1953 it is cosy and unrealistic,I did not expect anything else.
But it has a lot of location filming in Paris and it looks great.
As someone obsessed with aviation history I expect they did provide meals on flights to Paris in this period.
Flying was for richer people then and this was before the jet age,the flight would have been longer than it is nowadays.
Passengers would expect food and drink on nearly all flights..
One of the reviews here made me scratch my head.
France famous for poor food produce? Really?
British airliners always crashing? Well we know about the Comet but Britain had a mighty aviation industry in the 1950s.
The French talk about the 30 glorious years of growth and prosperity after WW2.
I never found out exactly which years? 1945-1975? 1948-1978? In any case France recovered from world war 2 thanks to the Marshall plan but also to the hard work of its citizens and due to having an economic plan.
Don't look for something deep, shocking or dramatic. This is a quiet, very charming little movie, with a number of humorous, lovely scenes. It contains several slices of life from the weekends of six characters visiting Paris, each with their own goals, problems and hopes.
The visiting characters are played by outstanding British actors and actresses. There is an absolutely priceless performance by Alistair Sim as a stuffy British diplomat. Margaret Rutherford plays to perfection the ever-lovable character we know from her other stellar performances. The only problem is finding a good copy of this movie. Hopefully some studio will realize its appeal and a good DVD will appear.
Ignore the agenda-driven propaganda from other reviewers.
The visiting characters are played by outstanding British actors and actresses. There is an absolutely priceless performance by Alistair Sim as a stuffy British diplomat. Margaret Rutherford plays to perfection the ever-lovable character we know from her other stellar performances. The only problem is finding a good copy of this movie. Hopefully some studio will realize its appeal and a good DVD will appear.
Ignore the agenda-driven propaganda from other reviewers.
A British romantic comedy, although it occasionally falls short of the ease of more popular humor, overall, it is quite pleasant and harmless entertainment.
Even though it adds nothing to the genre, which was never, in fact, very characteristic of British cinema, which oscillates more easily between vaudeville comedy and passionate drama, these Innocents in Paris has the gift of revealing the beginnings of mass tourism, still very incipient, of mixing a Franco-British cast, where names like Margaret Rutherford, Claire Bloom or Louis de Funés stand out and finally, of revealing itself a little of the innocence of the title, which only suits it well, beeing a romantic comedy.
It won't last in anyone's memory, but it also won't offend the viewer's good taste or intelligence.
Even though it adds nothing to the genre, which was never, in fact, very characteristic of British cinema, which oscillates more easily between vaudeville comedy and passionate drama, these Innocents in Paris has the gift of revealing the beginnings of mass tourism, still very incipient, of mixing a Franco-British cast, where names like Margaret Rutherford, Claire Bloom or Louis de Funés stand out and finally, of revealing itself a little of the innocence of the title, which only suits it well, beeing a romantic comedy.
It won't last in anyone's memory, but it also won't offend the viewer's good taste or intelligence.
After the war, France was a mess an agricultural economy with a bad reputation world- wide because of near universal collaboration with the Nazis. America resolved to rebuild Europe and part of the plan was to cast Paris as a romantic place, in spite of its history. Hard to believe today, but Paris is wholly a cinematic invention.
The instruction went out to US and UK studios. The US studios went along to protect valuable monopolies, already eroding. UK studios required a subsidy. Many famous and important films followed.
This is one of the subsidized UK films. (Included in the story is a joke about the safety of air travel. The first British airliner was a disaster, with many crashes.)
Several Londoners visit Paris for the weekend and have their lives changed by the romanticism of the place and people. As with most subsidized films, including many French films to this day, it stinks.
The story is broken into five threads: a statesman, Scotsman, young pretty woman, old bat, and marine in a marching band.
The young woman is Claire Bloom when she was pretty. But the only thread that has any charm at all is the one that follows Margaret Rutherford and her always present husband, Stringer Davis. She's unique, inventing a character that has become a stereotype.
Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
The instruction went out to US and UK studios. The US studios went along to protect valuable monopolies, already eroding. UK studios required a subsidy. Many famous and important films followed.
This is one of the subsidized UK films. (Included in the story is a joke about the safety of air travel. The first British airliner was a disaster, with many crashes.)
Several Londoners visit Paris for the weekend and have their lives changed by the romanticism of the place and people. As with most subsidized films, including many French films to this day, it stinks.
The story is broken into five threads: a statesman, Scotsman, young pretty woman, old bat, and marine in a marching band.
The young woman is Claire Bloom when she was pretty. But the only thread that has any charm at all is the one that follows Margaret Rutherford and her always present husband, Stringer Davis. She's unique, inventing a character that has become a stereotype.
Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
Did you know
- TriviaThe song being sung in the Russian nightclub is the Russian ballad "Dorogoi dlinnoyu", better known as the 1968 English version "Those Were The Days" sung by Mary Hopkin.
- GoofsWould meals be served on a short flight from London to Paris?.
- Quotes
Stewardess: Kindly fasten your seat belt, Madam.
Gwladys: Ooh, I haven't brought one with me!
- How long is Innocents in Paris?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Innocents in Paris
- Filming locations
- Paris, France(filmed in Paris)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 42m(102 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content