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34 out of 39 people found the following review useful:
A spectacle in every sense of the world!, 2 January 2002
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Author:
ironside (robertfrangie@hotmail.com) from Mexico
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Mike Todd's version of Jules Verne tale offers a refined English
comedy, giant-screen travel landscapes, dazzling brilliant color,
famous actors in small roles... as Phileas Fogg and his comical valet
made the tour of the world beginning in England, going to Europe, the
Middle East, India, and Asia...
It begins in (1872) Victorian London as the wealthy, supremely
confident Phileas Fogg sets out a wager that he can traverse the globe
in precisely eighty days... The other club members at the Reform Club
think Fogg is a fool, and challenge his claim and wager £20,000 that he
is wrong...
The snags begin almost immediately, as the true gentleman misses a
train and has to travel by balloon... The wild journey takes Fogg and
his new servant into a series of incredible adventures in every land
they pass through...
David Niven plays the true impassive Englishman Phileas Fogg... A
polished man of the world, who makes no superfluous gestures, and is
never seen to be moved or agitated... A puzzling personage, who
believes in progress, science, and intellectual deduction... An
eccentric quiet gentleman who talks very little and lives by a precise
schedule of tea, whist games, fish and chips... He lives alone in a big
house, and a single domestic sufficed to serve him...
Mexican screen legend Cantinflas known as the comic genius of the
Spanish-speaking world, plays Passepartout, the most faithful of
domestics...
Passepartout is a multi-skilled honest Frenchman with a pleasant oval
face, slender and slight, soft-mannered and serviceable...
Robert Newton plays Mr. Fix, the mysterious detective who had been
dispatched from England in search of the bank robber... He is a
slight-built personage, with a nervous, intelligent face, and bright
eyes peering out from under eyebrows which he is incessantly
twitching...
Shirley MacLaine plays the charming young Indian princess, Aouda, who
was married against her will at age seven... She speaks English with
great purity...
One of the main interests of the film is the various cameos played by
stars of the time who give minute but exquisite characterizations:
- Finlay Currie, Mr. Fogg's usual partner at whist...
- Robert Morley, one of the directors of the Bank of England...
- John Gielgud, the dismissed servant who relates that his master wears
two watches, and every available surface in his house is covered with
so many clocks...
- Trevor Howard, the club's member who rejects the news that the
English gentleman has robbed the Bank of England...
- Charles Boyer, the educated travel agent who proposes to the couple
to travel with a hot-air balloon...
- Martine Carol, the offended lady who slaps the new butler just for
saying: 'Mademoiselle!'
- Fernandel, the French coachman who was not so content with the tip...
- Gilbert Roland, the Arab who offers his ship to Marseilles just on
one condition...
- Cesar Romero, the henchman who sadistically insists Passepartout must
fight a bull even if he doesn't know how...
- Ronald Colman, the Railway Official who announces (No more railway!)
all passengers know that they must provide means of transportation for
themselves from Kholby to Allahabad...
- Cedric Hardwicke, the officer who finds happily a means of conveyance
: to cross the deep jungle on an elephant!
- Charles Coburn, the Steamship Company clerk who makes the observation
that the 'Carnatic' had sailed the evening before...and he doesn't
expect any vessel to Yokohama one week from now...
- Peter Lorre, the smiling Japanese steward who informs Passepartout
that being broke without money in Yokohama... is catastrophic!
- Glynis Johns, the sporting lady who bets with her companion on Fogg's
outcome...
- George Raft, the suspicious mob who chases everyone who stands near
his glamorous woman...
- Marlene Dietrich, the Barbary Coast saloon hostess who looks for a
way to be free...
- Frank Sinatra, the honky-tonk pianist...
- Red Skelton, the drunken with great appetite...
- John Carradine, the insolent colonel hit by an arrow...
- Buster Keaton, the American train conductor who announces some
delay...
- Andy Devine, the first mate who refuses 'Henrietta' to be burn...
- Victor McLaglen, the helmsman who is ordered ('Full steam!') to feed
all the fires until the coal is exhausted...
- John Mills, the sleepy carriage driver at the delicate moment...
The other scenes that were actually outrageous and delightful are:
Passepartout scooping some snow off an alp to chill a bottle of
champagne; his funny and graceful way of bullfighting; his burlesque
dance with a troupe of Spanish dancers; his venture to ride an ostrich
through a back-lot Hong Kong; his anxiety when he is captured by savage
Sioux; his courage when he is almost burned to death with an Indian
widow; his fault when he clears the 'human' pyramid; his ignorance when
he breaks Hindus religious beliefs and his absurdity when he constantly
tries to hit on anything in skirts...
With terrific music, this Academy Award winner for Best Picture of 1956
is nice for the family to watch...
19 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
The greatest supporting cast in the history of film, 28 September 2005
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Author:
Scaramouche2004 from Coventry, England
Michael Todd's screen adaptation of Jules Verne's classic novel is a
masterpiece.
Beautifully shot in over 100 different locations around the world, it
is one of the few novels which actually benefits from big screen
treatment. No longer do we have to imagine these fine exotic places in
our minds, they are presented here in full cinematic and Technicolour
brilliance.
The great David Niven plays the quintessential English gentleman to the
hilt as Philias Fogg, the well to do bachelor who after calmly
announcing that it was possible, accepts a £20,000 wager from his
fellow Reform Club members to travel round the world in 80 days.
In tow on this mammoth voyage are newly appointed man servant
Passepartout played by Mexican entertainer Cantinflas, a rather miscast
Shirley MacLaine as Aouda a recently rescued Indian Princess and the
lovable and ever watchable Robert Newton as Mr. Fix the detective who
is convinced Fogg is a master criminal who left Britain having just
robbed the Bank of England.
Yet what adds flavour to an already wonderful story and fascinating
movie, is that no matter what corner of the globe our intrepid Fogg
appears, he is helped, hindered, slowed down, befriended and attacked
by a myriad of world renowned movie stars. Never before or since has a
film boasted so many top named stars in cameo appearances.
Robert Morley, Ronald Squire, Finlay Currie, Basil Sydney, Noel Coward,
John Gielgud, Trevor Howard, Harcourt Williams, Martine Carol,
Fernandel, Charles Boyer, Evelyn Keyes, Gilbert Roland, Cesar Romero,
Alan Mowbray, Cedric Hardwicke, Melville Cooper, Reginald Denny, Ronald
Colman, Charles Coburn, Peter Lorre, George Raft, Red Skelton, Marlene
Dietrich, John Carradine, Frank Sinatra, Buster Keaton, Tim McCoy, Joe
E. Brown, Andy Devine, Edmund Lowe, Victor McLaglen, Jack Oakie,
Beatrice Lillie, John Mills, Glynis Johns and Hermione Gingold all come
along for this bizarre journey.
Now thats what I call a cast list.
Niven is as always a joy to watch as the seemingly unstoppable and
resourceful Fogg, so much so that the film can be forgiven its epic
length.
However, I do feel as though a good half an hour could have been
trimmed had Todd decided to tone down some of Cantinflas' over long
routines. We know what a fantastic and talented performer he was, there
was no real need to hammer the point home with a nigh on 15 minute bull
fight sequence, Japanese circus tricks and stunt horse riding.
However despite this one criticism, the film is legend, the story is
legend and was fully deserving of the five Oscar's it was awarded,
including Best Picture of 1956.
In fact I feel certain that if Philias Fogg had a film like this on
DVD, he would have much preferred to stay at home and watch it. I know
I certainly would.
15 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Best imitation of one of the finest work by Jules Verne., 2 May 2007
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Author:
ali ilyas (mianaliilyas786@hotmail.com) from Lahore, Pakistan
Well before ditching in this movie I had a glimpse of the book and I feel very delighted about the extraordinary vision of Jules Verne. He had predicted many inventions and innovations before the time, but I felt more delighted after seeing this movie. The true essence of Jules Verne's literal work is flawlessly captured by director Michael Anderson. This movie is true extravaganza with some special acting by veteran actor David Niven. His portrayal of arrogant, time-table stricken rich innovator was immaculate. This movie also has handful of cameos played by great actors like Frank Sinatra and others. Only one thing that can bother viewers is its immense length where some scenes are monotonous and make you feel loitered. Over all it's a great movie and best motional version of Jules Verne's finest work. The movie won five Oscars including best picture of 1956.
15 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
"It Might Have Been In County Down, Or In New York, In Gay Paree, Or Even London Town", 26 January 2007
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Except for the horrible miscasting of Shirley MacLaine as a Hindu
princess, Around the World in 80 Days comes close to being a perfect
film. The rest of the cast paints to perfection the portrait of Jules
Verne's odyssey about a very anal retentive man driven by a wager to
complete a global circumnavigation in 80 days in the mid nineteenth
century.
Jules Verne unlike in a lot of his other stories makes one of his main
characters here a Frenchman. Normally the international minded Mr.
Verne never had any of his protagonists come from his native France. In
this case the valet Passepartout accompanies English gentleman Phileas
Fogg on the journey and comes close to wrecking it a couple of times.
Michael Todd had to settle for second choices for both of his leads.
The part was originally offered to Cary Grant who turned it down and
Todd settled happily for David Niven. And even though Fernandel offered
to learn English to play Passepartout, the process would have taken too
long so the Mexican comic star Cantinfas got the part. Fernandel did
have a small role as a Parisian hansom cab driver.
It's still a mystery to me as to why Cantinflas on the strength of this
and Pepe did not break out of the Latin American market where he was
nothing short of a demi-god of the cinema. Certainly his presence in
this film opened up a huge market of viewers in the Spanish speaking
parts of the world.
Also consider that the probably no other performer in the history of
the cinema ever got as good supporting casts as Cantinflas did in both
Around the World in 80 Days and Pepe. Maybe he didn't break into the
English speaking cinema fan world, but it was no accident that all the
stars who appeared in both wanted to be associated with him.
Shirley MacLaine would have to wait until Some Came Running for a real
break out role. She's just not the type to play a Hindu princess.
Someone like Jean Simmons who played one in Black Narcissus would have
been far better.
David Niven however got on the crest of a big career wave that wouldn't
reach maximum until his Oscar two years later in Separate Tables. This
was one of his best career roles and nice that for once he would not
have to carry a mediocre picture on the strength of his considerable
charm.
Mr. Niven sadly recalls in his memoirs that Robert Newton was already
dying when he made Around the World in 80 Days. The doctors had told
the screen's most celebrated alcoholic that he had only a short time
left when he did this film, his liver was failing. Newton does a grand
job as the unctuous conniving detective Fix who gets it into his head
that Niven robbed the Bank of England.
Around the World in 80 Days won for Best Picture in 1956 and four other
Oscars including best musical score. Oddly enough the song Around the
World was not nominated in that category even though it was a big hit
that year. Bing Crosby for Decca and Eddie Fisher for RCA Victor had
the big hit records of it, Frank Sinatra also did it for Capitol. It
was a great tribute to its composer Victor Young and lyricist Harold
Adamson. Young died in 1956 and the Oscar for Best Scoring was given to
him posthumously.
Producer Michael Todd and Director Michael Anderson did a first rate
job in casting all the small bit roles with major players. A lot of
these names are unfamiliar to today's generation, but if they see the
film it's a chance to see a lot of great cinema names at one time doing
real characters instead of just walking on as themselves.
The film holds up well today and can still be enjoyed. Maybe someone
will actually try to make it in the transportation mode of the
Victorian era. Can it be done in 80 Days?
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Go and see it - in a cinema, 13 December 2000
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Author:
george-102 from Germany
I really enjoyed this film, and was shocked to see all the
negative
comments about it on IMDB. Yes it's long, yes it's a fantasy
rather
than true-to-life, yes it's spectacular rather than deep
drama.
But what the hell, it's also (like the book) a hilarious send-up
of
Englishness as seen by a Frenchman. The millions
of cameo roles (actually I'm HOPELESS at recognising faces, so identified
none of them) camp it all up splendidly. This film is
one of those, like the Ealing comedies or the Carry-On films, that define
the British Myth.
OK, so it won't work on TV, unless you have a widescreen TV
and
can shut yourself away from all distractions for several
hours.
But I just dare anyone to be bored by the film in a cinema.
They don't make them like that any more, because these
days
films are "made for TV" . . .
19 out of 31 people found the following review useful:
Cantinflas Saves This Trip Around The World, 31 March 2006
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Author:
ccthemovieman-1 from United States
This is a bit dated by now, but still not a bad film to watch. It seems
like more of a travelogue than anything else, at this point. Frankly,
at three hours and being a mid-50s film, I thought it might be too slow
in too many spots but that was not the case. Only the bullfighting
scene went on too long. The rest kept my interest.
David Niven gets top billing but the real star of the show is
"Cantinflas," a Spanish actor who, to my knowledge, only made it big in
this movie.....at least in this country. He is very likable and
entertaining. The only thing is he is not always easy to understand. I
used English subtitles a few times when he spoke.
Niven played his normal stiff-neck Brit role. Thank goodness we don't
see those, "I say, old bean" characters from GB anymore. However, I
have always appreciated the British vocabulary, so much more refined
than here in North America. Shirley MacLaine was so young I didn't
recognize her. Of course, she made it difficult to spot her playing a
brown-skinned Indian princess.
In all, decent entertainment but one that might bore a lot of people
today, which is probably why they did a re-make. I haven't seen the
re-make, but I'll bet it isn't as good as this movie.
9 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
This Picture Makes No Sense On A Small Screen, 24 December 2004
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Author:
tonstant viewer
Around the World in 80 Days is part comedy and part demonstration of a
new wide-screen process. I saw it in its original run at the old Rivoli
Theater in New York, where the screen ran from 48th St. to 49th St.
People gasped at the size of the screen when the curtains opened,
before the film even got underway.
If you watch the new 16x9 DVD on anything less than a 50-inch
television, the visual composition and the pacing are absolutely
incomprehensible, and you're on your own to seize on the many little
things that are there to entertain you. But as a whole, the film loses
its reason for being when viewed on a conventional TV.
David Niven is unbeatable as Phileas Fogg, Shirley Maclaine is
implausible but slyly humorous as the Princess, Robert Newton appears
sober most of the time and hammy all of it as Inspector Fix.
Cantinflas is inexplicable as Passepartout, except perhaps as Mike
Todd's attempt to corral the entire Latin American market. The Mexican
comedian's English is very shaky; it slows him down, and his clarity
comes and goes and makes me wonder if Paul Frees didn't replace a lot
of his lines. At any rate, only in the seemingly improvised encounter
with Red Skelton at a buffet does Cantinflas do anything remotely
humorous, and there he's the straight man.
The cameos are fun, and if you're too young to know who all these
geezers are, it's worth it to find out, and use the IMDb to track down
the work that made them famous. I remember the shriek the original
audience let out when the piano player was revealed to be Frank
Sinatra.
Viewing the film now, I was most moved to see Edmund Lowe and Victor
McLaglan reunited in the engine room of the Henrietta, thirty years
after they riveted the industry in "What Price Glory?" Buster Keaton
concentrates really hard in his appearance as the train conductor, to
excellent effect. A. E. Matthews gives a terrific acting lesson in
saying "no" a half a dozen times in a London sequence.
Among the original bettors, locate Ronald Squire with the drooping
mustache, hollow nasal baritone, and a slouching relaxation while
performing that was a marvel - Rex Harrison publicly admired Ronald
Squire's ease on stage all his life. In fact, Squire is so relaxed he
makes someone like Dean Martin seem uptight.
So, this film is an unusual case - requiring patience for lots of
little joys on the small screen, but making sense only on a large one.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
The Parapatetic Novel of Jules Verne, 24 January 2007
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Author:
theowinthrop from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
In 1946 Orson Welles decided to return to his Broadway roots and
produce a dramatic version of the 1872 Jules Verne novel "Around The
World In 80 Days". It was to be a big production - with a musical score
by Cole Porter, and Mike Todd as producer. Welles, besides directing
it, was playing the part of the Detective (in the musical he was "Dick
Fix" = presumably called that because of the slang term for a
detective). It was an extravaganza, and Welles had plenty of gags in it
including one where he brought out a kitchen sink (i.e. "everything and
the kitchen sink": get it?). The show had a big opening night - and
sank in a couple of months. It also had no song of any worth by Porter,
whose normal abilities were finally shown not to be limitless (a
typical song in the show was "There goes Phileas Fogg" - hardly sounds
interesting from a man who created "Night and Day" or "Begin the
Beguine" or "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" or "Anything Goes"). Welles had
to declare bankruptcy, and had tax problems for years (which explains
why after 1949 he did much of his work in Europe). He also sold his
interest in the musical to Todd.
That is why Michael Todd is given full credit for "Around The World In
80 Days" (the 1956 movie) rather than an angry Welles. He really had no
leg to stand on in this case.
"Around The World In Eighty Days" is really the odd duck among the
major novels of Verne. If you read it, except for the use of a "wind
wagon" in the Western United States portion of the novel, there are no
odd devices or inventions or methods of travel in the story. In fact,
the best known image of the movie (David Niven and Cantaflas flying in
a balloon over the Pyranees) is not from the novel - Verne's balloon
novel was "Five Weeks In A Balloon" (and he came out against balloons
in "Robur The Conqueror").
"Around The World" was Verne's fun novel about English stuffiness (he
disliked the English), wherein the phlegmatic and punctual Phileas Fogg
makes a bet of his whole fortune to prove that he can get around the
world in under three months. As such, the novel enabled Verne to show
how travel was not very broadening to Fogg (a perfect name for the
hero) and yet fascinating to his French valet Jean Passepartout
(pronounced "Pass - par - too"). It is Passepartout who examines all
the foreign peoples and lands he and Fogg travel through. Fogg only
shows spirit twice: in rescuing the Indian princess Aouda from being
burned alive, and in getting into a duel with the obnoxious American
Colonel Seth Proctor.
When he wrote the novel, Verne was aware of an actual "Fogg" - but an
American one. The eccentric American millionaire, George Francis Train
(great name for a traveler) traveled around the world, in 90 days in
1870. Train would be so impressed by his effect on Verne, he did a
second world tour in 72 days. And in 1889 the American journalist Nelly
Bly did it in 69 days (when she stopped off in Nantes to meet Verne, he
asked her where Aouda was). Verne made fun of the story himself in 1893
when in another novel he had a German aristocrat try to beat Fogg's
record, but so botches up his schedule that he ended up taking twice as
long.
David Niven is good as Fogg in one of his "comeback" roles that led to
his Oscar winner in "Separate Tables". Shirley Maclaine seems good as
Aouda, but she really is not eastern enough (maybe Merle Oberon could
have handled the role twenty years earlier). Cantaflas rarely did
English speaking films, and it is this one that gives non-Spanish
audiences an idea of his abilities as a comic performer (but his
Mexican films are better). Robert Newton was in his final performance
as Fix - and he is very good. He comes across as conniving but witless
at the same time. However I find that Peter Ustinov's performance in
the 1989 miniseries was funnier.
Then there are all those stars in cameo parts. A clever selling idea by
Todd to ensure the public's attention in the film. As a result this is
the only film where Ronald Colman and Frank Sinatra and Col. Tim McCoy
and Red Skelton and Edmund Lowe all appear - though not necessarily
together. As many of these stars of the 1930s - 1950s are no longer
remembered too well, it is difficult to see if the cameo idea was such
a hot one in the long term. But the film is still enjoyable, and should
lead one back to reading the Verne original.
15 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
known for its end credits and numerous cameos, 14 August 2004
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Author:
didi-5 from United Kingdom
'Around the World in Eighty Days' stars David Niven,Cantinflas, and Robert
Newton (in his final role) but is mainly known for featuring zillions of
people in cameo parts as Niven moves round his world trip.
You can spot ... Marlene Dietrich, Frank Sinatra, Buster Keaton, Ronald
Colman, Gilbert Roland, Shirley MacLaine, Tim McCoy, Hermoine Gingold,
Charles Boyer, Finlay Currie, Trevor Howard ...
Is it any good? Well, it is too long but gives a good attempt to present
countries and travelling on a big scale. Niven is as charming as ever,
while Cantinflas manages to stay irritating for three hours. Robert Newton
as the obsessed Inspector Fix is entertaining but he'd done
better.
One to watch at least once (and no doubt better than the recent remake).
And the end credits by Saul Bass are superb.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Part Travelog, Part Movie, 14 October 2000
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Author:
spirit11 from Memphis, TN
WARNING: These comments may reveal portions of the film's
plot.
With David Niven as Phineas Fogg, you will find that this version of the
Jules Verne story is almost as broad as the subject of the film -- "around
the world."
As is often said, they don't make them like this anymore. According to the
brief description in AMC's viewer guide, the film was shot on location in 13
countries with 75,000 costumes and 70,000 extras -- and it shows! Look at
the list of credited and uncredited actors in the IMDB and you'll be hard
pressed to find a film with more leading and character actors. Just spotting
the faces of the classic actors in the film is a game in
itself.
Another aspect that will show dramatically is that some sequences are
incredibly camp -- they are obviously cut from travelog movies of the day.
And in many cases where the footage was shot new, it still has that
flair.
Where the film succeeds best is when it goes for the comedic bits. Watch the
scene in the saloon out west, where Mr. Fogg's valet, Passepartout runs into
Red Skelton as a drunk while listening to Frank Sinatra play the
piano!
Overall, most will find the film a bit long. The many scenes that are shot
from the point of view of the actors simply "watching the scenery go by"
drag the film. Even some of the action scenes run long. When Passepartout
must fight a bullfight early in the film, the fight goes on and on and on.
Hang on for the funny bits in the film -- and the cameos -- and you can't go
wrong. Enjoy the scenery!
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