Idol of Paris (1948) Poster

(1948)

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7/10
Kitten with a Whip
richardchatten31 May 2022
Producer Maurice Ostrer took a bath with this nonsense while the critics who laid into this enjoyable hokum deprived it of an audience that might have savoured it's folly. It's hard to decide whether this is pastiche or straight-faced parody, but the requisite note of lunacy is established right from the start when the very first person you see is Miles Malleson as Offenbach; and the catfight with whips alone justified the price of admission.
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8/10
Whips and Wicked Ladies
wilvram1 June 2022
Actually there is only one wicked lady as Beryl Baxter's Therese is virtuous throughout, despite what is sometimes claimed.

How do you rate a film like The Idol Of Paris which received a welcome big-screen outing at the BFI Southbank yesterday, its first showing in decades? Much of the story is absurd and some of the situations and dialogue pure Ernie Wise, but is hugely entertaining despite or partially because of that.

This attempt by Leslie Arliss, Maurice Ostrer and co to replicate their former triumphs at Gainsborough is chiefly remembered for its whip fight or strictly speaking duel between Therese and Cora Pearl, a highlight which is certainly executed with aplomb. One would have thought the moral outrage affected by the press at this would have guaranteed the film's success, but it was not to be.

It seems unjust that Beryl Baxter's career was stopped in its tracks, as she does everything that is required of her and makes an effective heroine. Christine Norden was surely never better than as the glamorous bitchy Cora while Miles Malleson is atypically forceful as Offenbach. Mischa Spoliansky, whose music enlivened so many British films of the time, contributes a memorable score, primarily his 'Dedication'.
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Beryl Baxter Stars
drednm23 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Sprawling story set in 19th France in the reign of Napoleon III (nephew of Bonaparte) follows poor Theresa (Beryl Baxter) and her rise from poverty to wealth through marriage and liaisons. After she is thrown into the streets by her cruel father, she is taken in by a sensitive tailor (Andrew Osborn) after he finds her passed out on a rainy street. He's a former violinist with a bad hand. They eventually marry and he squanders what little he has on her, including a ticket to a concert where a famous pianist named Herz (Michael Rennie) is playing. The moment their eyes meet, they are in love.

They confront the tailor with their love and he commits suicide. They marry and enjoy a successful life (she plays violin) until he starts dallying with a famous courtesan named Cora Pearl (Christine Norden) and gambling. Unable to pay his debts, he sails for South America and a new start. The boat sinks. Befriended by the famous composer Offenbach (Miles Malleson), she gets a job playing violin and eventually meets and enters into an arranged marriage with the dissolute Marquis Paiva.

Now a Marquise, she catches the eye of the Emperor (Kenneth Kent) much to the ire of Cora Pearl, the one-time court favorite. The rivalry between the women is settled in a fantastic duel with whips (switches). Cora Pearl is sent packing and the Emperor comes to visit Theresa but she surprisingly turns him away. There's another big surprise waiting for our heroine.

Most reviews of this film are totally wrong in saying that Theresa sleeps her way to the top. Indeed, quite a lot is made of the fact that her virtue saves her over and over again.

Beryl Baxter is excellent as Theresa as is Christine Norden as Cora Pearl. Their scenes together are quite diverting. Michael Rennie gets top billing but has a relatively small role as Herz (not Hertz). Andrew Osborn is excellent as the tailor, and Miles Malleson is a delight as Offenbach. Others include Kenneth Kent (Napoleon), Margaretta Scott (Eugenie), and Leslie Perrins as the slimy Marquis Paiva.

This film has been out of circulation for so long, almost everything you read about it is wrong.
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A Harlot High and Low
The_Dying_Flutchman25 July 2011
"Idol of Paris" is a forgotten film based on a long out of print historical fiction entitled "Paiva, Queen of Love" by one Alfred Schirokauer, a semi-credulous Austrian biographer/novelist of real and imagined people.

The film itself as directed by Leslie Arliss, a distant cousin of George Arliss, takes place in the time of French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, slouching in the frame of actor Kenneth Kent. It details the escapades of a female street urchin named Theresa adequately played by Beryl Baxter as she sleeps her way to the top of the Parisian courtesans pile.

As she flits around the stately palaces of the mid-19th century, she decides that even she is too grand for Napoleon, especially with the handsome hunks like Hertz, Michael Rennie, lurking in the shadows. Hertz is also more than ready to lift her underskirts in wild abandon.

If this is your idea of scintillating entertainment, you'll have a difficult time locating a copy of it. It was available awhile back, but now seems to have vanished. As far as this reviewer is concerned, there's a reason it has been forgotten. Better look for fast action in perfumed pantaloons elsewhere. Or give Arliss far better 1945 film "The Wicked Lady" an eyeballing.
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