Library
Click on Title for International Movie Database link, click on Cover for Amazon link
DVDs in Collection: 6
 
ID: 24
USA   05 Jun 1963
 
Comments: A story of passion, bloodshed, desire and death... everything, in fact, that makes life worth living
Director: Billy Wilder
Screenplay: Alexandre Breffort, Billy Wilder
Producer: 
Cast: Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Lou Jacobi, Bruce Yarnell, Herschel Bernardi, Hope Holiday, Joan Shawlee, Grace Lee Whitney, Paul Dubov, Howard McNear, Cliff Osmond, Diki Lerner, Herb Jones, Ruth Earl, Jane Earl, Tura Satana, Lou Krugman, James Brown (II), Bill Bixby, John Alvin
Genre: Comedy
 
Running Time: 147
Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1 (NTSC Anamorphic Widescreen)
Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Subtitles: Spanish, French
Features: 
Studio: MGM Home Ent. (Europe) Ltd.  DVD Release: 26 Nov 2001  Rating:  Suitable for 15 years and over
DVD Region: 2  Discs: 1 (DVD)
Purchase Place:   List Price: £15.99
Purchased on:   Price Paid: 
"Irma La Douce" reunited "The Apartment" team of Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine with director Billy Wilder in an adaptation of the stage musical of the same name which had been a hit in Paris, London and New York. The screen transfer by Wilder and his colleague--writer IAL Diamond--however, omits the show's songs, relegating them to a background score refashioned by Andre Previn with some additional themes of his own. Background here is a complimentary term, for whatever qualms one might entertain as to this move, the two sets of themes are skilfully woven together by Previn and emerge as a witty and lyrical aural delight in their own right which is given due prominence on the soundtrack.
Wilder is no rush to tell prostitute Irma's story: her affair with Lemmon being the pivot of the tale as he takes on the disguise of an English Lord. Lemmon and MacLaine beautifully play their mutual attraction under Wilder's deft direction with the slapstick never allowed to get out of hand. Many will recognise Wilder's touch in his handling of the scene where Lemmon as a policeman is carted off in a van full of voracious prostitutes from the bunks-in-the-train sequence in "Some Like It Hot". The handsome production, designed by Alexander Tranner--with the occasional view of the Seine thrown in for good measure--and the Panavision photography by Joseph La Shelle are further assets.
On the DVD: The DVD contains a longer than usual theatrical trailer, half shot as a cartoon with characters closely resembling those Pink Panther figures who emerged at the same time from the Mirisch Brothers, a pair prominent in sustaining the unique success of United Artists, whose name was deleted, in favour of the MGM logo, in the early 1960s. It's too bad that the music on this DVD transfer sometimes strikes a coarse note particularly over the extended opening credits. --"Adrian Edwards"

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