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47 out of 50 people found the following review useful:
Lies My Butler Told Me, 11 April 2006
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Author:
seanodartofilm from Ireland
Lies, sometimes, are an act of kindness. Many times I hasten to add. The imagination of a lonely child is ignited by a meek man in love. The man, as played by the extraordinary Ralph Richardson, is a mass of contradictions and yet we understand him. Married to a shrew and in love with Michele Morgan no less. Carol Reed is not a director that comes immediately to mind when one lists the greatest directors of all time, but in my book, is right up there with the very best. No other director has been able to bring Graham Green to the screen with its spirit so gloriously intact. Guilt and fear as riveting entertainment. Suspenseful, funny and beautiful to look at. Go try to top that.
42 out of 48 people found the following review useful:
The Fallen Idol: Minor Masterpiece, 14 April 2006
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Author:
nmarshi from Los Angeles, California
Just saw "The Fallen Idol" at the Nu-Art in West Los Angeles on the
last day of its one week run, with a new crystal clear 35 mm print. The
meaning of the title only becomes clear at the film's conclusion, so I
won't say much more on that score. From a Graham Greene novella which I
have never read, the author drafted the screenplay, so presumably the
film remains faithful to Greene's perennial themes: loyalty and
betrayal; faith and faithlessness; marriage and divorce. What makes
these issues intriguing is that the film largely revolves around the
point of view of an innocent, charming young boy called Phillipe,
played to perfection by Bobby Henrey. He lives in the London embassy of
a French speaking country, which is a sort of purgatory (always the
Catholic themes with Greene) which is both in England and not subject
to its laws. He is taken care of by a kind valet/ chef de maison called
Baines (understatedly played by Ralph Richardson) and his Cruella De
Ville of a wife (played as the personification of small-minded evil by
Sonia Dresdel). Phillipe has no mother (she has been unwell and away
for a long time), and no memory of her. Insteads, he has the run of his
own Garden of Eden-the huge Embassy with its lovely views over London,
great rooms and sweeping staircases. He even has his own snake- a pet
that he hides behind a brick on the balcony and carries around in his
pocket. He hero-worships Baines, who indulges him and talk to him and
hates Mrs Baines who orders him around, hectors him and threatens him
at every turn. The story of the film occurs over a week-end, where
Phillippe and the Baines' are left alone in the Embassy as the
ambassador has gone to bring back his wife from her convalescence, and
revolves how Phillipe understands the love triangle between Mr Baines
and Mrs Baines and the lovely Julie (played with cheek-bones high) by
Michele Morgan, speaking both French and English.
Look out for some terrific performances by the main cast (especially
Bobby Henrey as Phillipe), but also by a series of supporting
characters : two washerwomen, a sharp tongued lady of the night, a
kindly bobby, several detectives and a perceptive doctor. The
photography bears mentioning. There are shades of the "Third Man", as
well as a great hide and seek game in darkness under the furniture in
the empty Embassy, and a truly memorable run through the empty streets
of London in the dark. From a personal point of view I enjoyed several
scenes shot on location at the London Zoo, which was all very familiar
even from a fifty year vantage point.
The film won a British Academy award so it's not exactly undiscovered,
but it's not been easy to find at revival theaters or on DVD, but it
deserves to be. As I said at the top, a minor masterpiece which
operates on many levels. (Los Angeles-April 2006).
32 out of 35 people found the following review useful:
Fallen Idol one of my favorites, 22 August 2005
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Author:
Robert Kroning from Seaside OR
Fallen Idol is a great film, with all actors in fine form, especially Ralph Richardson, and including the boy. Richardon is the embassy butler married to a shrewish, domineering wife. He has an illicit, albeit discreet love affair with a beautiful young embassy secretary - you can't help but feel for them both. When the shrew is found done in by a fall down the ornate embassy staircase, the wonderful gentlemen detective types enter, ever so politely, of course. Fallen Idol is an example of the best of British movie-making: low key, sympathetic, civilized. The boy's pet snake is a nice touch. A gem; a good example of the type of fine film that I wish could be made more available here. A Graham Greene story, directed by Carol Reed - what more could we want. Another great Carol Reed 'lost' film is 'Outcast of the Islands', also with Ralph Richardson.
31 out of 36 people found the following review useful:
"No, we have to tell lies, and more lies.", 29 October 2005
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Author:
theowinthrop from United States
Produced only a year or two before THE THIRD MAN, THE FALLEN IDOL is as
good a film, and directed by the same man: Sir Carol Reed. Here we are
in a claustrophobic world of an Embassy in London. The Ambassador and
his wife are too busy to watch their son Phillipe (Bobby Henrey), so
the boy is dropped off into the hands of the Embassy's butler Baines
(Ralph Richardson). Baines' wife (Sonia Rendell) is a jealous shrew.
She has reason to be jealous - Baines is having an affair with a
younger woman named Julie (Michelle Morgan). Phillipe likes Baines,
whom he idolizes as a strong father figure in the absence of his real
father. He also likes Julie, and he dislikes Mrs. Baines. There is
reason for that - in her moments of anger and jealousy she does act
harshly and nastily towards Phillipe.
In pursuit of proof of her husband's infidelities, Mrs. Baines goes to
incredible lengths. She even stands on a dangerous ledge to watch them.
But a gust of wind causes the lower part of the window to knock her
legs out from underneath her, causing her to fall two stories to her
death. Enter the police (Jack Hawkins, Geoffrey Keen, Bernard Lee), who
are wondering how Mrs. Baines died so violently. Baines and Julie
panic, and begin trying to put together a coherent story of an accident
(although they know nothing about what actually happened). They have no
choice but to involve Phillipe, but this is unfortunate because the
little fellow knows little about creative, consistent lying. So details
of Baines' relationship with Julie come out, and the police begin to
wonder that this is not an accident but murder.
The film is a gem because much of it is shot from the perspective of
the boy. He has admired Baines as a honorable father figure, but he is
increasingly worried for Baines and Julie and he is increasingly
confused when, far from being advocates of honesty, they suggest he lie
to assist them. The film does end with a degree of disillusionment for
the little fellow, rather unusual for such films in general. But the
disillusionment is a key to Greene's view of the world (Holly Martin's
of his pal Harry Lime in THE THIRD MAN for instance, or Van Johnson's
views of God and Deborah Kerr in the original THE END OF THE AFFAIR).
It is a remarkably good film, and well worth watching.
27 out of 33 people found the following review useful:
Adult Mysteries Through A Child's Confused Eyes--and a Beautiful Camera, 16 March 2006
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Author:
noralee from Queens, NY
"The Fallen Idol" builds on a classic situation of English children's
literature--the lonely rich kid from overseas in the big house left
with hired caregivers-- to create a masterful suspense tale that deftly
examines truths and half-truths, lies and white lies from the boy's
confused perspective.
Based on Graham Greene's short story "The Basement Room", the film
builds on the look of Hitchcock's "Rebecca", with a house as visually
significant as Manderlay, plus fraught with Lillian Hellman's
sophisticated view of childhood as in "These Three". Key is not just
Georges Périnal's enthralling story, but the stunning direction by
Carol Reed in how he uses gorgeous black and white cinematography from
both a memorable interior and a London that ranges from scary night to
a misleadingly bright daylight that is equally full of secrets, as seen
in a new 35 MM print at NYC's Film Forum.
The beautiful production design is dominated by a gorgeous staircase in
the ambassador's residence that has to rank with one of the all time
movie centerpieces as in "Gone With The Wind", and is as central for
the first and last third of the film as the Rear Window in another
Hitchcock film. Reed has the camera go up and down those heavily
symbolic stairs as a shared link from the main floors that are the busy
public areas, down to the basement servant quarters then up and up to
the private residential areas, with overlooking balconies and windows
that are key for spying on each level. The staircase sets up several
dramatic events (adding layers to the film's title), climaxing in a
notable scene of the incredibly tense voyage of a child's
innocent-seeming paper airplane that carries a significant clue slowly,
slowly traversing that vertical no-man's/everyman's land from the top
to the bottom, as we hold our breath where it will land.
Throughout the film, the complex world of adult relationships and
interactions is seen through the eyes of a child (the wonderfully
natural, lively, lisping Bobby Henrey - who now lives in Connecticut
and did a Q & A at the Film Forum I didn't attend) so that childish
activities take on ironic or double meanings of freedom or dread,
between appearances and reality, from a good night story, to a game of
hide and seek, to a picnic, to running away, to an idyll at the zoo
that one would assume inspired Rowling for a key scene in "Harry Potter
and the Sorcerer's Stone". Throughout the film, the boy constantly
misunderstands what he is seeing - sometimes he sees the truth,
sometimes he doesn't, sometimes he only sees part of the truth, as the
adults alternate in advising him to lie or don't lie.
The young Ralph Richardson is absolutely marvelous as he switches from
father substitute to hen-pecked husband (Sonia Dresdel as his wife
recalls Agnes Moorhead), to relaxed lover, to efficient butler.
While this new print revival is being distributed as a forgotten
masterpiece, my parents vividly remembered seeing it first run in their
neighborhood Brooklyn movie theater and that it was quite popular. I
presume that the same team's next work on the masterpiece "The Third
Man" overshadowed this gem in film history, but also perhaps because
this film doesn't end on quite the cynicism that a contemporary
audience expects from their work.
26 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
excellent adaptation, 4 October 2000
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Author:
R Worrell (rhea_worrell@prodigy.net)
This is an excellent adaptation of the Graham Greene novella.
Richardson's performance is incredible, and the relationship
between Philippe and the butler is the centerpiece of the
film.
I sometimes wonder if this film would have been more successful with a
different title. IMHO "The Fallen Idol" suggests a Saturday matinee
shlockfest or a pretentious drawing room comedy.
This is a good companion piece to another Graham Greene novella -- also
directed by Reed -- the Third Man, which is just possibly the greatest
film
of all time...
19 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
Very Hitchcockian, filled with suspense., 15 August 2001
Author:
douglas.soesbe from Los Angeles
A riveting little movie. Very Hitchcockian in its style. Smart, economical dialogue. After a somewhat slow, crafty build, it will grab hold of you. Wonderful bit with a paper airplane. Filled with superb little touches.
12 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Oh what a tangled web we weave..., 7 January 2009
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Author:
NCarolinaGirl from Greensboro, NC
I'm amazed at the time of writing this, there are only 33 comments and
1700 votes. How is it that more people haven't seen this movie.
Another classic pairing of Directot Carol Reed with Writer Graham
Greene - who would later go on to even more success with their
collaboration in "The Third Man". While I wouldn't rate this movie
quite as high as TTM, it is very good film in its own right.
This is a tale as seen from a child's eyes in a very grown-up world
with very adult issues. This is captured superbly in the cinematography
that uses low angles at child height and looking up. This is also a
story of secrets and lies - and so the camera is very effective in
changing shots and angles to always give them impression that others
are spying or eavesdropping. This is also conveyed very effectively
with the set - which is filmed substantially withing the Embassy
residence which is a huge, lavish mansion. It has many levels and
staircases - none so impressive as the ornate, curving main staircase.
The camera also makes good use of close-ups and wide angle shots. Often
times, movies with stick with one or the other. I think it helped keep
it interesting.
The characters were all well cast. I especially liked Ralph Richardson
as the butler whom the boy, Phillipe (Bobby Henry), idolizes.
Richardson has just the right balance of decorum and warmth to make you
understand why the boy, who is starved for attention, follows after
him. He has a very smooth speaking voice that is pleasant to listen to.
He reminds me a lot of Kevin Spacey in his appearance and demeanor
(especially in "Pay it Forward"). I think the director did a great job
of eliciting a good performance out of the then 8 year old Henry. I
heard that the director's secret was not to have the child respond to
an actors lines - but to que the child himself in a different take. I
think the precociousness and spontaneity of the child were captured
quite well with this.
There are quite a few memorable scenes - hide and seek in the dark,
cavernous mansion; the boy running through the dark London streets with
all the alleys, archways, wet streets and glowing lanterns; the paper
airplane flying from the upper balcony and circling all the way down,
slowly, to land at a detectives feet; the detective questioning Baines
at the top of the stairs, all the while the tilted window is visible in
the background. The music changes pace with the story, and at times it
was frantic and frenetic to match the suspense and fear of the story. I
felt it was used quite effectively.
The story addresses themes of loneliness, betrayal, secrecy, lies, and
loss of innocence in a plot that kept my interest from beginning to
end. My only complaint is that at times the dialogue was difficult to
understand with the clip, British accents. I wish this had been offered
in closed captions so I could catch some missed conversations.
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
A magnificent film, directed by Carol Reed and written by Graham Greene, 22 February 2008
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Author:
Terrell-4 from San Antonio, Texas
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Phillipe, the 8-year-old son of the ambassador, bored and lonely, has
been left in the charge of Baines, the embassy butler, and his wife.
The ambassador has gone to bring back his wife, who has been ill for
several months. Phillipe (Bobby Henrey) idolizes Baines (Ralph
Richardson), who talks to him, tells him stories, takes him for walks
and pays attention to him. Baines' wife (Sonia Dresdel), however, is a
shrew. She has little patience for Phillipe, she runs the housekeeping
side of the embassy with an iron hand, and she is unshakeable in her
commitment to the cold, loveless marriage she has with her husband. She
doesn't know, quite yet, that Baines and Julie (Michele Morgan), a
secretary in the embassy, have been meeting secretly each week for
months, just for tea or a private walk. They love each other but seem
to find no way to break free of his marriage. And then Mrs. Baines,
after an hysterical argument when she discovers Julie, is found dead at
the foot of the grand stairway in the embassy. Phillipe thinks Baines
killed her and is determined to protect him. His lies make things much,
much worse.
This is a marvelous film, full of irony and subtlety. Phillipe is too
young to grasp the meaning of much of what he sees and hears. He
unexpectedly interrupts a meeting between Baines and Julie in a tea
shop. She is telling Baines she will be leaving; that their
relationship is hopeless. Baines is trying to find someway for her to
stay, if even for just a day or two more. Suddenly there is Phillipe,
happy to find Baines, climbing onto a seat next to them, having a
pastry, observing what Baines and Julie are saying to each other so
quietly and intensely, and believing when Baines says they are talking
about a friend and that Julie is his niece. Something is happening, he
knows, but he simply doesn't register how desperately they want to talk
to each other without pretense.
Phillipe tells fibs, especially to protect McGregor, his small pet
snake, from Mrs. Baines' anger. When she accuses him of telling lies,
Baines tries to protect Phillipe by saying that there are lies and
there are lies...that some lies can simply be a kindness to protect
others. Mrs. Baines finds ways to trap Phillipe into admitting he met
Baines' "niece." When she dies, Baines tries to find ways to use
lies...or at least not the full truth...to protect Julie. Phillipe lies
to the police in an effort to protect Baines. The conclusion of the
film is a masterpiece of amusing irony when we realize the truth might
be more dangerous to Baines that Phillipe's lies.
Carol Reed directed The Fallen Idol in 1948. The year before he gave us
Odd Man Out. In 1949 came The Third Man. Then Outcast of the Islands in
1952. That's four incredible films, one right after the other. And
don't forget Our Man in Havana in 1959. The Fallen Idol, The Third Man
and Our Man in Havana were collaborations with Graham Greene. These
movies are not just literate and often amusing, they're thoughtful and
often uneasy. And all are stunning to look at.
The Fallen Idol gives us two great performances, or rather one great
performance and one performance great despite itself. Ralph Richardson
as Baines is as understated as the character. We're witnessing a
character full of emotion and longing, yet so carefully proper and
repressed it hurts. Baines relationship with Phillipe is genuine, yet
in many ways it's based on lies and made-up stories. This is one of
Richardson's best performances. As Phillipe, Bobby Henrey does a
masterful job, but that's because of the patience and skill of Carol
Reed and the cleverness of the film editor. Henrey was a
nonprofessional who got the part because Reed thought he looked exactly
like the kind of young boy Phillipe would look like. As a person who
worked on the film with Reed said later, Henrey couldn't act and "had
an attention span of a demented flea." Reed took infinite pains to gain
Henrey's friendship and confidence. He would walk the boy through the
part, usually standing in for Richardson when Richardson would have
been off camera feeding Henrey lines. He shot miles of film with
Henrey, and then spliced the bits and pieces together into coherent
reaction shots. You'll note that Henrey has almost no scenes that go
for more than a word or sentence before there are cutaways. Even so,
the result is a great film portrayal of a little boy, Phillipe, who can
be irritating, impatient and willful, and yet touching in his
determination protect his friend, Baines.
14 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Classic Greene, 21 January 2005
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Author:
davewe from United States
This film has almost been forgotten and isn't available on DVD. It was
produced the year before the same principals (Graham Greene and Carol
Reed) made The Third Man and delves into some classic Greene themes.
The POV is told almost completely through the eyes of a boy who wants
to protect his beloved friend and butler Baines. In the process, he
almost ensures that Baines will be charged with murder.
It's wonderfully staged so that the boy gets to witness all kinds of
adult stuff, but doesn't completely understand what he's seen.
Ralph Richardson is great as Baines and there is genuine suspense in
whether the boy will tell the truth or lie and whether either will help
his friend.
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