1959 a black man, a white man, and a white woman, in post-nuclear war New York

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1959 a black man, a white man, and a white woman, in post-nuclear war New York

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Audrey Hepburn and Mel Ferrer
Life: Remembering Audrey Hepburn /08
Mel, Mr Famous, Pippen And Audrey
Elena et les Hommes (Jean Renoir, 1956)
Ingrid Bergman and Mel Ferrer in Elena et les Hommes
Cast: Ingrid Bergman, Jean Marais, Mel Ferrer, Jean Richard, Juliette Gréco, Pierre Bertin, Dora Doll, Frédéric Duvallès, Renaud Mary. Screenplay: Jean Renoir, Jean Serge. Cinematography: Claude Renoir. Production design: Jean André. Film editing: Boris Lewen. Music: Joseph Kosma.
Like French Cancan (1954) and The Golden Coach (1952), this is one of Jean Renoir’s brightly Technicolored entertainments, with ravishing cinematography by his nephew, Claude Renoir, that recalls the rich colors of the paintings by Jean’s father and Claude’s grandfather, Pierre-Auguste Renoir. And like many of those paintings, the movie opens itself up to criticisms of possessing more style than substance. Elena et les Hommes, which was originally released in the United States under the title Paris Does Strange Things and now bears the title Elena and Her Men, is a giddy, somewhat brainless romp whose chief claim to our attention is that it was the first film Ingrid Bergman made after her break from Roberto Rossellini, who starred her in serious dramas in which she was put to extremes of emotional torment. Making Elena must have been an enormous relief for her, because it shows: She has never been more beautiful onscreen, wearing the opulent finery of 1880s Paris. She has also never been more lively or funny, throwing herself with complete abandon into the nonsense of the plot. It makes me regret that she did so few comedies: Only Indiscreet (Stanley Donen, 1958) and Cactus Flower (Gene Saks, 1969) gave her a real chance to lighten up the way Renoir’s film does, although she showed her comic skills by parodying her more glum roles, especially the doughty missionary in The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (Mark Robson, 1958), in her Oscar-winning performance in Murder on the Orient Express (Sidney Lumet, 1974). It’s too bad that her leading men in Elena aren’t up to her standards: Jean Marais looks like he doesn’t understand what’s going on (which is understandable when so much is), while Mel Ferrer looks like he gets it but can’t quite overcome the handicap of being Mel Ferrer when what is needed is a Cary Grant or a James Stewart to match Bergman’s skills.

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A new article on my companion blog Three Enchanting Ladies! I discuss Paris Pursuit, a photo project by fashion photographer by Richard Avedon for Harper's Bazaar, featuring Audrey Hepburn, Buster Keaton, Mel Ferrer and more. Read it HERE!
📸 Photo by Richard Avedon, Harper's Bazaar (September 1959)
The Pyjama Girl Case (1978)
1957. Eddie Constantine, Mel Ferrer, Maurice Chevalier, Audrey Hepburn, Fernandel and Gary Cooper. The picture was taken during a cocktail party organized in honor of the filming of the movie "Love in the Afternoon".