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French Line

Original title: The French Line
  • 1953
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
744
YOUR RATING
Jane Russell in French Line (1953)
When her fiancé leaves her, an oil heiress takes a cruise incognito in order to find a man who will love her for herself and not for her money.
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
59 Photos
Classic MusicalHoliday RomanceComedyMusicalRomance

When her fiancé leaves her, an oil heiress takes a cruise incognito in order to find a man who will love her for herself and not for her money.When her fiancé leaves her, an oil heiress takes a cruise incognito in order to find a man who will love her for herself and not for her money.When her fiancé leaves her, an oil heiress takes a cruise incognito in order to find a man who will love her for herself and not for her money.

  • Director
    • Lloyd Bacon
  • Writers
    • Mary Loos
    • Richard Sale
    • Matty Kemp
  • Stars
    • Jane Russell
    • Gilbert Roland
    • Arthur Hunnicutt
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    744
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Writers
      • Mary Loos
      • Richard Sale
      • Matty Kemp
    • Stars
      • Jane Russell
      • Gilbert Roland
      • Arthur Hunnicutt
    • 23User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 2:11
    Trailer

    Photos59

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    Top cast99+

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    Jane Russell
    Jane Russell
    • Mary 'Mame' Carson
    Gilbert Roland
    Gilbert Roland
    • Pierre DuQuesne
    Arthur Hunnicutt
    Arthur Hunnicutt
    • 'Waco' Mosby
    Mary McCarty
    Mary McCarty
    • Annie Farrell
    Joyce Mackenzie
    Joyce Mackenzie
    • Myrtle Brown
    • (as Joyce MacKenzie)
    Paula Corday
    Paula Corday
    • Celeste
    Scott Elliott
    Scott Elliott
    • Bill Harris
    Craig Stevens
    Craig Stevens
    • Phil Barton
    Kasey Rogers
    Kasey Rogers
    • Katherine 'Katy' Hodges
    • (as Laura Elliot)
    Steven Geray
    Steven Geray
    • François, Ship Steward
    John Wengraf
    John Wengraf
    • Commodore Renard
    Michael St. Angel
    Michael St. Angel
    • George Hodges
    Barbara Darrow
    Barbara Darrow
    • Donna Adams
    Barbara Dobbins
    • Kitty Lee
    Carlos Albert
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Suzanne Alexander
    Suzanne Alexander
    • Model on Staircase
    • (uncredited)
    Suzanne Ames
    • Maid
    • (uncredited)
    Virginia Bates
    • Model
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Writers
      • Mary Loos
      • Richard Sale
      • Matty Kemp
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    5.1744
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    Featured reviews

    5moonspinner55

    "He's interested in community fun, not community property!"

    Oil heiress from Texas, tired of being a one-woman corporation and falling for men who are allergic to her millions, takes a cruise to France posing as a fashion model. Tatty romantic comedy with musical interludes does have some smart lines, Gilbert Roland trying his best as a lovestruck playboy (of French descent!), and Jane Russell in the lead, alternately beaming and scowling, her tall frame self-consciously hunched to make up for everyone else's shortcomings. Russell is very natural and appealing on screen, yet she has a bad habit of filling in the blanks by making silly, exaggerated faces--some of which are funny intentionally as well as unintentionally! A blowsy piece of fluff, the movie does have its pleasures, particularly in the writing department, which is a notch above the fashion show norm. ** from ****
    7HotToastyRag

    Cute sentimental favorite

    I bought a copy of The French Line before I'd even seen so much as a trailer for it. I knew right away it was going to be a sentimental favorite, because of the Cameron Crowe flick Singles in 1992. Bridget Fonda isn't happy with her body, and when she watches an old musical on tv with the big-busted Jane Russell and Mary McCarty, she decides to get breast implants. It's a very funny scene, and I'd always wanted to watch the full version of the 10-second clip featured in Singles.

    If you don't already have a heart attachment to this movie, you might think it's silly and that I need to get my head examined. However, since it's my review, and since I do have a heart attachment to it, I'm going to praise it. Jane Russell stars as a Texas gal who goes on an ocean liner to France. She's literally on "The French Line" and has to dodge playboys who give her "the French line"; get it? Gilbert Roland is the suave Frenchman who tries to win Jane's affection. Jane sings in very revealing clothes to show off her beautiful figure, and in one number she's even in the bathtub! But perhaps even better known than the "Any Gal from Texas" number is Jane's striptease-the dance was so risqué they had to film her standing behind a plant to get the number past the censors!
    9mybabyleilani24

    I loved the French Line

    I just saw this movie at the Egyptian theater yesterday and I enjoyed every minute of it. All of Jane Russell's musical numbers were great!! I admit I didn't like the songs Gilbert Roland sang, but other than that the movie was awesome!! The story line was great and it was really funny. I also enjoyed all of her costumes. I love the girl that played her designer friend, she was goofy. I am proud to say that I was actually really lucky to have seen the real Jane Russell at the 3D showing of the movie. She had a lot of funny stories to tell about the filming of this movie as well during her interview. I recommend this movie to anyone!!
    6JamesHitchcock

    Any film which annoyed the League of Decency cannot be all bad

    "The French Line" is a musical comedy about love and romance. It contains no sex scenes and no nudity or even toplessness. There is no violence, no foul language and no drug references. It is so square it even features a heterosexual male fashion designer. It seems like the sort of film that could be enjoyed by all the family without offending anyone.

    Wrong. When it was released in 1954 it was condemned as immoral by the Catholic League of Decency who, apparently, took exception to the supposedly revealing costumes worn by its star, Jane Russell. Ironically, Russell, herself a devout Christian, had been unhappy about wearing a bikini in the film and had been allowed to exchange this for a one-piece swimsuit, but even this gesture towards modesty failed to placate the League.

    The film is essentially a remake of a comedy from the thirties called "The Richest Girl in the World". In that film the heroine, Dorothy, was the heiress to a large fortune. She was worried that potential suitors would love her for her money and not for herself, and therefore changed places with her attractive secretary Sylvia. If any man showed an interest in the supposed 'Sylvia' (really Dorothy in disguise), she would suggest that the supposed 'Dorothy' (really Sylvia in disguise) had fallen in love with him and would welcome a proposal of marriage. The real Sylvia was happily married and had no interest in any of Dorothy's suitors; the point of this charade was that a man who showed any interest in the fake 'Dorothy' had failed the test and proved himself unworthy of the real Dorothy's hand.

    In "The French Line" this situation is given a new twist. The heroine, Mary, is also the heiress to a large fortune (from ranching and oil in Texas), but she has precisely the opposite problem. Whereas Dorothy was worried about attracting unscrupulous fortune-hunters, Mary (somewhat improbably for a girl who combines great wealth with the looks of Jane Russell) is unable to attract men at all, as potential husbands are actually deterred by the thought of all that money. (Well, this is a work of fiction). The film begins with Mary's third fiancé in succession breaking off their engagement.

    Mary is travelling to Europe on a luxury French liner, and swaps identities with a young fashion model named Myrtle in order to conduct a romance with a smooth French designer named Pierre. In the fifties models were presumably less well paid than they are today, when supermodels will not wake up for less than $10,000. Today a fashion model would probably have more in her bank account than a Texan oil millionairess. (Actually, that famous quote from Linda Evangelista dates back to the early nineties. Allowing for inflation, it must now cost at least $20,000 to get a supermodel out of bed).

    This is one remake that is rather better than its original. "The Richest Girl" is a very short film, and seventy minutes were not sufficient either to develop the characters or to bring out all the comic possibilities of the situation; the conclusion, in particular, is rushed and muddled. "The French Line" is a very light-hearted, frothy confection (in many places seeming to double up as an extended advertisement for the fashion industry), but at just over 100 minutes it does have more developed characters, not just Mary and Pierre, but also Myrtle and Mary's old friend Annie, also working as a fashion designer. The one character I did not like was Mary's guardian Waco Mosby. He was supposed to be a larger-than-life, tough-talking Texan, but because he seemed to be the sort of American who treated the Declaration of Independence as also being a declaration of war on the English language, I found it difficult to understand a word he was saying.

    Although the music is nothing special when compared to the likes of, say, Rodgers and Hammerstein, the song and dance numbers do add to the charm of the film, as well as showing off Jane Russell's charms to their best advantage. And any film which annoys America's narrow-minded Puritans cannot be wholly bad. 6/10
    jarrodmcdonald-1

    Jane Russell as a sassy southern belle

    It is difficult getting past the terrible condition of the RKO Technicolor print for The French Line. It is even more difficult believing that nobody has wanted to do something about it. Someone: please clean it up, restore it, do whatever needs to be done.

    Jane Russell is superb as a sassy southern belle on a cruise to Europe. Adding to the fun is character actor Arthur Hunnicutt and leading man Gilbert Roland. The musical numbers are indeed risqué but the lyrics and choreography are not to be missed. Neither is Miss Russell's costuming which one must see to believe.

    Aside from a better print, the only way this film could have possibly been better: if Robert Mitchum had been in it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although Le fils de Sindbad (1955) marked Kim Novak's first screen assignment, The French Line was her first released picture in a bit part as a fashion model.
    • Goofs
      When in NYC Pierre asks Waco for the time; Waco says 5 PM and 3 PM in Texas. This is factually wrong. Texas is predominantly in the Central Time Zone with a few cities in the Mountain Time Zone. Waco and Mame are from Paris, Texas which is the Central Time Zone, therefore, it would have been 4 PM there.
    • Quotes

      Mary 'Mame' Carson: [This is the cut out speech that Jane Russell makes during her song, "Lookin' for Trouble"] That's all I need, is a man! Any type, any style! Just so, he's a man! Now, he can be short, tall, or elongated! He can be thin, muscular, obese... that's fat, you know! Any direction will do. He can be sweet, sensitive, intelligent, a little coy, but not a boy! Now, don't get me wrong! 17 to 70 will do! It ain't the age, it's the attitude! However, there is one requisite I must make: he has to be... brief! So bring him on, stand back, and watch my own private chemical reaction start to work!

    • Alternate versions
      Due to a censorship controversy over 'Jane Russell' 's "Looking for Trouble" number, the film was briefly released without a Production Code seal. The final version (with seal) features a much tamer performance with relatively little breast exposure. The initial UK version omits that sequence entirely. Both versions survive, and are easily distinguishable: the "hot" version includes a spoken narration midway through in which Mary talks about what she wants from a man; in the shorter release version, some of the dance is performed with Mary positioned behind a figure-obscuring planter, and without the closer, high-angle cleavage shots.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood the Golden Years: The RKO Story: Birth of a Titan (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      WELL! I'LL BE SWITCHED
      (uncredited)

      Music by Josef Myrow

      Lyrics by Ralph Blane and Robert Wells

      Performed by Jane Russell and Theresa Harris

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 20, 1954 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • French
      • Spanish
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The French Line
    • Filming locations
      • Pier 88, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(French Line pier at end of West 48th St.)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes

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