Tuesday 12 July 2016

I've Just Seen: Gigi (1958)

Gigi (1958)

https://www.film.ru/sites/default/files/movies/posters/Gigi-10.jpg

Director: Vincente Minelli

I like my musicals with a good dose of dancing to accompany the all the singing going on. If Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, or Anne Miller are in the cast, I know I am going to enjoy myself. Leslie Caron made her American debut in An American in Paris, which I enjoyed, and she was known for her dancing rather than her singing. So why was she cast in a musical where she doesn't get any big dance numbers, and all her singing was dubbed?

Sadly, that is not the only problem I had with this musical. Perhaps it has dated severely since it premiered, for the story of a girl being raised to be a high-class courtesan sits very uncomfortably today. It is all presented with an amount of Gallic charm (filtered through an 1950s American sensibility) that masks the story's seedy undercurrent (my sister didn't get the courtesan storyline until I explained it to her; and then she was even more put-off). Songs like 'Thank Heaven for Little Girls' make the atmosphere even more irksome.

The only positive is the art direction and costume design. It does look beautiful, and the use of real Parisian locations was a good idea. The house of Gigi and her mother and grandmother, with its plush red walls, is lovely, as are the costumes Gigi wears. Leslie Caron is sweet as Gigi, not really playing the coquette Gigi was in the original French film: she has a naivety, captured in her song 'I don't Understand the Parisans.'

I was not charmed by this, and can think of better musicals that could be on the 1001 Films list; and I would not have given this Best Picture either, by a long way. You will either love it or hate it; and I deeply disliked it. And have not found myself humming any of the tunes since seeing it!

5 comments:

  1. Man, do I agree. Musicals can be a hard sell for me anyway, but this one really bothers me a lot, and for the reasons you mention. Yes, it's beautifully filmed and staged and I won't take that away from it. But everything else is awful.

    At its heart, Gigi is the story of an old woman teaching her niece how to be a prostitute. It's completely repellent. And the "Thank Heaven for Little Girls" part is so disturbing, having a man in his 60s singing it to a character in her teens. I wanted a shower after watching this.

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    1. I watched the Retrospective feature on the disc, and was amazed at the people showering praise on the film, saying it is oh so charming, and does everything with a tinkle in its eye. I really don't get it.

      And how was this given so many awards?! 1958 can't have been that poor a year.

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    2. It wasn't. Just based on the few Oscar categories I care about we get The Defiant Ones, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and I Want to Live!

      You don't have to look too hard for unnominated gems, either--Vertigo and Touch of Evil certainly spring to mind as do Cairo Station and Ashes and Diamonds.

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  2. What a relief to see I was not alone in my dislike for the movie. You got it pinned down precisely. Why did they not see it like that in 1958?

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    1. I don't know! As I said, I watched several people in a DVD documentary singing its praises. I just felt deeply uncomfortable.

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