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Can-Can

  • 1960
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 11m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Can-Can (1960)
Montmartre, 1896: the Can-Can, the dance in which the women lift their skirts, is forbidden. Nevertheless, Simone has it performed every day in her nightclub. Her employees use their female charms to let the representatives of law enforcement look the other way - and even attend the shows. Then the young ambitious judge Philippe Forrestier decides to bring this to an end. Will Simone manage to twist him round her little finger too? Her boyfriend, Francois, certainly doesn't like to watch her trying.
Play trailer2:25
1 Video
34 Photos
ComedyMusical

In 1896 Paris, a female nightclub proprietor fights against the forces of public morality for the right to feature her performers doing the risqué dance, the Can-Can.In 1896 Paris, a female nightclub proprietor fights against the forces of public morality for the right to feature her performers doing the risqué dance, the Can-Can.In 1896 Paris, a female nightclub proprietor fights against the forces of public morality for the right to feature her performers doing the risqué dance, the Can-Can.

  • Director
    • Walter Lang
  • Writers
    • Dorothy Kingsley
    • Charles Lederer
    • Abe Burrows
  • Stars
    • Frank Sinatra
    • Shirley MacLaine
    • Maurice Chevalier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Dorothy Kingsley
      • Charles Lederer
      • Abe Burrows
    • Stars
      • Frank Sinatra
      • Shirley MacLaine
      • Maurice Chevalier
    • 39User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 5 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:25
    Official Trailer

    Photos34

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    Top cast61

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    Frank Sinatra
    Frank Sinatra
    • François Durnais
    Shirley MacLaine
    Shirley MacLaine
    • Simone Pistache
    Maurice Chevalier
    Maurice Chevalier
    • Paul Barriere
    Louis Jourdan
    Louis Jourdan
    • Philipe Forrestier
    Juliet Prowse
    Juliet Prowse
    • Claudine
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Andre - the head waiter
    Leon Belasco
    Leon Belasco
    • Arturo - orchestra leader
    Nestor Paiva
    Nestor Paiva
    • Bailiff
    John A. Neris
    • Jacques - the Photographer
    Jean Del Val
    Jean Del Val
    • Judge Merceaux
    Ann Codee
    Ann Codee
    • League president
    Frank Baker
    Frank Baker
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Benjie Bancroft
    • Club Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Herman Belmonte
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Shirley Blackwell
    • Townsfolk
    • (uncredited)
    Eugene Borden
    • Police Officer Chevrolet
    • (uncredited)
    Buddy Bryan
    Buddy Bryan
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Carole Bryan
    • Gigi
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Dorothy Kingsley
      • Charles Lederer
      • Abe Burrows
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews39

    6.32.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6moonspinner55

    A high good time!

    I was all set to dislike "Can-Can" for a variety of reasons (not the least of which is Frank Sinatra cast in a musical set in 1896 France...Frank Sinatra??), but the film is a lot of fun. Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine are in good spirits throughout this pleasing adaptation of the stage-success about a dance-hall proprietress who defends her right to perform the scandalous title-named dance, deemed lascivious in its day. It runs a little too long, and MacLaine is more comfortable in her love scenes with Ol' Blue Eyes than with Louis Jourdan (who doesn't match up well with Shirley at all--he looks puny next to her), but otherwise it's surprisingly enjoyable and Juliet Prowse gives her small part as a dancer a great deal of zest. **1/2 from ****
    6Nazi_Fighter_David

    "Can-Can" emerges as a flat soufflé

    "Can-Can" is a feeble and obvious attempt to match the wit and high professional gloss of "Gigi." The cast even included Maurice Chevalier, still enjoying the quiet pleasures of old age as a tolerant judge named Paul Barriere, and Louis Jourdan, cast here as an upright young judge named Philippe Forrestier… After Judge Forrestier becomes amorously involved with the café owner Simone Pistache (Shirley MacLaine), and legally involved with her shifty lawyer boyfriend (Frank Sinatra), he is no longer the same man…

    "Can-Can" is a musical film that virtually embodies the reasons for the decline of the genre in the sixties… Except for its appropriately gaudy costumes and for the exuberant performance by dancer Juliet Prowse as a cancan girl, the musical is without joy or genuine style under Walter Lang's unfocused direction…

    The Cole Porter score reveals the composer at his most ersatz Parisian… The two of the central roles are grotesquely miscast: Sinatra, who seems to have arrived to Paris by way of New Jersey, creates no discernible or even vaguely likable character in François… MacLaine does well in the musical portions, but her Pistache is simply shrill and unappealing… Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan work hard at injecting some life into the dull proceedings… Chevalier with his trademark shrugged-shoulders, laissez-faire attitude toward life and love, expressed to such songs as "Live and Let Live" and "Just One of Those Things," and Louis Jourdan with the French charm he displayed so prominently in "Gigi."

    For all their efforts, however, Can-Can emerges as a flat soufflé
    6Bunuel1976

    CAN-CAN (Walter Lang, 1960) **1/2

    This is another film which was often shown on TV (twice on the local channel alone!) but I hadn’t bothered with until now; it’s recently been released as a 2-Disc Set by Fox but, in view of its middling reputation, opted to acquire the film by itself.

    To begin with, the DVD presentation had its good and bad points: the film was made available in its “Roadshow Version” – running 142 minutes against the “General Release Version” which eliminated 11 minutes of extraneous music (Overture, Intermission, Entr’ Acte and Exit Music); unfortunately, time seems to have taken its toll on the negative as there were several instances of color fluctuation throughout! As can be surmised, I decided to give the film a whirl as part of my ongoing marathon to commemorate the 10th anniversary from the passing of its male lead – Frank Sinatra; curiously enough, given his reputation as one of the foremost American singers, he appeared in few vintage musicals over the years…and it’s certainly a tribute to his acting talent that his non-musical work (often in hard-hitting, even groundbreaking films) has tended to overshadow this more familiar aspect of his personality – at least on the silver screen!

    Anyway, to get back to the film proper: I found it quite engaging and its considerable length not overly taxing – and this, to a large degree, is thanks to the formidable star cast (which, apart from Sinatra, included Shirley MacLaine, Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan). The first two had already appeared together – albeit in dramatic roles – in SOME CAME RUNNING (1958), while the others had been wonderfully teamed in the same genre and a similar ambiance in GIGI (1958). Ironically, both these films were helmed by a master stylist – Vincente Minnelli…so, perhaps, Fox should have struck a deal with MGM to acquire his services for CAN-CAN – but, given director Lang’s previous musical success with THE KING AND I (1956), they obviously thought he could do no wrong. The fact is that his handling is sterile and more accommodating to the Widescreen ratio than the necessities of the plot and characters – filming events from a distance and rarely cutting or even moving the camera; this lazy approach (which still landed him a nomination from the Directors' Guild Of America!) is doubly frustrating when viewed on a small screen!!

    Apparently, the production went through a lot of script changes (Sinatra’s role, reportedly, wasn’t even in the stage original to begin with!), songs were dropped and replaced by other Cole Porter standards which don’t really fit in (such as Jourdan’s “You Do Something To Me”); the rest of the soundtrack isn’t particularly outstanding (unlike that of GIGI, for instance) but a number of tunes are cleverly reprised (sometimes with variations and by different characters) during the course of the film. It was nice, too, seeing two world-renowned singers with such different styles as Sinatra and Chevalier come together (and having fun with it); Chevalier and Jourdan’s roles, then, are virtual carbon copies of their GIGI characterizations – but it’s a formula that seems to work (even if it’s not as central to the main plot this time around, Jourdan having been relegated to The Other Man type).

    MacLaine did few musicals as well but her vivaciousness (as a dancer and owner of an establishment which finds itself frequently in trouble with the law over the forbidden “Can-Can” dance, but who manages to charm the stuffy judge at the trial) ensures that her numbers emerge as the show’s highlights: the Apache Dance, the drunken recital of a vulgar song at her engagement party to Jourdan (at the instigation of lawyer Sinatra, who loves her but is unwilling to commit himself) and the “Garden Of Eden” sequence (intended to demonstrate that “Sin wasn’t invented in Montmartre – it was only perfected there”!). Two other important figures (though both severely underwritten) are those played by Juliet Prowse and Frenchman Marcel Dalio as the nervous but devoted manager of the “Bal De Paradis” (the latter was a versatile actor in his native land, but he was stuck with this kind of unrewarding role during his long tenure in Hollywood!); the former appears as a leading dancer at the club and MacLaine’s prospective rival – interestingly, the two actresses’ physiognomies are strikingly similar – for Sinatra’s attentions (a situation which is indirectly played upon during the afore-mentioned “Garden Of Eden” number, apart from which they’re teamed for the climactic Can-Can performance…to the predictable enthusiasm of the formerly disapproving head of a female Legion Of Decency-type group).

    In the end, while this film can’t be considered a classic musical as such, it still seems to me to have been unfairly maligned – as some fantastic talent has been assembled in the service of a charming (albeit unsurprising) narrative to provide colorful (if uninspired) entertainment which the genre was capable of during its studio-system heyday…
    7gridoon

    Chic, sparkling musical!

    Strangely enough, the weakest aspect of this musical is the quality of the songs. Most of them are fairly mediocre, and fail to stay in the memory for long. But otherwise, "Can-Can" is a smashing entertainment. Lavishly produced and gorgeously photographed, this is one expensive movie where the money were spent with care and taste (unlike, for example, "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" which, despite its big budget, looked cheap). The story may be a little thin, but it's suspenseful, too: you can never predict with absolute certainty if MacLaine will choose Sinatra (who is wonderful) or Louis Jourdan (who is as sly and charming as he was when he played the villain in "Octopussy"). But above everything else, this movie is a feast for the eyes!
    9bkoganbing

    Ring-a-Ding, Ding, Ding

    Another Cole Porter Broadway show makes it Hollywood, but not intact. Can Can retained most of its score, but 20th Century Fox added some other Porter standards like Let's Do It. Just One of Those Things, You Do Something To Me. And of course the book was sanitized by the Hollywood censors.

    Briefly the plot is a girl who's a Can Can dancer played by Shirley MacLaine has to choose between two men of the legal profession. Upright judge, Louis Jourdan and less than scrupulous attorney, Frank Sinatra. Maurice Chevalier is an older judge who knows all of them and presides over the film like an avuncular grandfather.

    The performers all do justice to the Cole Porter score and the best musical moment is Frank Sinatra's singing of It's All Right With Me. He's singing it to Juliet Prowse who was his main squeeze at the time. It's one of Sinatra's best musical moments on film, a perfect mating of singer and song.

    I'm sure glad neither Sinatra or MacLaine attempted any kind of phony French accent. Sinatra tried a Spanish one in The Pride and the Passion and the results were hilarious.

    Shirley MacLaine before she came to Hollywood was in the chorus of Can-Can on Broadway so she was a perfect fit for her part as Simone Pistache the cabaret owner where the illegal Can-Can is performed.

    For reasons I don't understand a duet with Frank Sinatra and Maurice Chevalier singing I Love Paris was cut, though it remained in the original cast album. Blockheads at Fox, what were they thinking?

    It also would have been nice to have some Paris location shooting for this film, it was all done at 20th Century's backlot where Nikita Khruschev paid a historic visit and said this was an example of western immorality and decadence. You couldn't buy that kind of publicity.

    Verdict on this film, well as Old Blue Eyes sang:

    RING-A-DING DING DING, C'est Magnifique.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      It is explained in the film that the can-can was considered a lewd and lascivious dance (in reality often performed without panties).
    • Goofs
      About 34 minutes in, when Philipe tries to close the window in Simone's boudoir, the whole wall shakes as he struggles with the window, indicating that it is a set wall and not a real building.
    • Quotes

      François Durnais: You look like a broken umbrella.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: Montmartre-1896
    • Connections
      Featured in 20th Century-Fox: The First 50 Years (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      I Love Paris
      (uncredited)

      Music by Cole Porter

      Lyrics by Cole Porter

      Sung by chorus over the beginning and end credits

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 16, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Streaming on "Movie Captures" YouTube Channel
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Jack Cummings' Production of Cole Porter's Can-Can
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France(stock footage of the evening barge sequences)
    • Production company
      • Suffolk-Cummings Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 11m(131 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.20 : 1

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