TICKET TO PARADISE – Review

Still Photography on the set of “Ticket To Paradise”

Hmmm, now this is something pretty rare. The two films I’m reviewing for this weekend have a few things in common, “subject-wise” (y’know, aside from being in color, being a “talkie”, etc.). This too concerns an estranged couple reuniting for a non-holiday event. With RAYMOND & RAY, it’s about two stepbrothers having to travel to their dad’s funeral, while this new release is about an estranged (long-divorced) parents having to travel to their daughter’s wedding. And it’s not a two-hour car trip, but a rather long flight to an exotic island. Oh, and the former marrieds are played by Oscar-winning Hollywood royalty, or about as close as you can get to that. Plus it’s their fourth flick acting opposite each other (fifth if you count when he directed her). So lots of moviegoers are hoping that their chemistry is still potent as they go to their multiplex box office, or more likely its website, to purchase a TICKET TO PARADISE.

In a bit of a switcheroo, the story begins with the main couple still apart. Each is telling their best buddy about how impossible it was to live with the other (with widely different riffs on their meeting, courtship, etc.). This all leads back to them being “pulled back in” by their only child Lily (Kaitlyn Dever). She wants them both in attendance for her law school graduation ceremony and assures them that their reserved seats will be in distant sections of the auditorium. So the big day arrives and …David (George Clooney) begrudgingly takes his place right next to his ex Georgia (Julia Roberts). Then the duo takes their daughter, along with her best pal/college roomie Wren (Billie Lourd) to the airport for her post-grad “vacay” to Bali. Her parents heave a sigh of relief as the ladies enter the gate, knowing they won’t have to endure each other for a loooong time (or so they hope). Lily and Wren have “tons o’ fun” until they get separated from their tour group while snorkeling. Luckily the long swim to shore is avoided when they spot a boat. And the luck keeps rolling along as Lily is immediately smitten by their rescuer, a hunky young seaweed farmer (there’s such a thing) Gede (Maxime Bouttier). Soon she’s contacting her folks again to invite them to her “destination wedding” to him. And, wouldn’t you know it, they get booked in the same section, on the next flight to the island. Plus (talk about a “co-inkee-dink”), the pilot is Georgia’s much-younger French “bae” Paul (Lucas Bravo). When the duo arrives they cease their bickering long enough to agree to join forces to stop this too-hasty nuptials (she’s throwing away her law career, darn it). But can these former feuding lovers really work together, or can true love really triumph against such formidable forces?

So the best description of the acting style of the two leads may seem like an insult, though it’s certainly not my intention. As the film progressed I feel as though Ms. Roberts and Mr. Clooney were, well, …coasting. It’s not that they weren’t making any effort, but rather they’re so confident and “at ease” with their screen personas that they were just going “with the flow” feeling that their audience will follow their path. This certainly was the case for many classic screen pairings of the “Golden Age” such as William Powell and Myrna Loy or Spencer Tracy and Kathryn Hepburn. It’s not just that their characters engage in playful sniping at one another. In a couple of sequences, they talk about the dissolution of their married union with remorse and regret. And their uneasy alliance results in some truly awful behavior. Yet somehow the screen personas of the two can elevate even the frothiest of premises. This audience goodwill carries over a bit to their screen sibling as Dever scores many laughs in the ingenue”second-gen” role. She’s engaging, but it feels like a bit of a “step back” after her “take charge” snarky smart turn last week in the Shakespearian farce ROSALINE, which far fewer people will see since it went straight to Hulu. Dever delivers, but the role is no challenge for her skills. Happily, she’s often paired with Lourd as Wren who brings some much-needed off-kilter energy as the rom-com cliche, the “hard-partying” frisky BFF. Speaking of another rom-com cliche, the very photogenic Bravo gives the thankless role of Paul, the “Baxter” who’s not much of a romantic threat, though his best efforts make him more sweet and endearing than this clueless doofus deserves. As for the groom Gede, Bouttier is the required gorgeous and way-too-understanding “dreamboat” who’s got a boat.


Another rom-com vet is at the helm, namely Ol Parker who last gave us the MAMMA MIA sequel. Oh and he co-wrote this with Daniel Pipski, it took a “tag team” to concoct this “lighter than air” trifle. Again, this is not meant as a “burn” as many will enjoy this while in their cushy multiplex recliner, but the plot specifics will probably evaporate from the brain during the ride home. Well, you may ponder a trip to Bali as it’s eye-poppingly beautiful here, though much of it was actually shot in Queensland, Australia (a good ad here for their own travel industry). This may be the best current example of an “auntie” or “grammy” movie as it’s a way to treat a relative to a matinee that won’t upset them (or tax the noggin), despite a blink and you’ll miss it “F-bomb”. The back-and-forth snipping between the leads gets tiresome, but it just goes to prove how powerful, and forgiving, the chemistry and charisma of these two movie icons are. They’re truly the reason why many fans will believe their theatre stub was a TICKET TO PARADISE.


2 Out of 4


TICKET TO PARADISE is now playing in theatres everywhere

MRS HARRIS GOES TO PARIS – Review

Lesley Manville stars as Mrs. Harris in director Tony Fabian’s MRS.HARRIS GOES TO PARIS, a Focus Features release. Credit: Dávid Lukács / © 2021 Ada Films Ltd – Harris Squared Kft. Courtesy of Focus Features

Mid-century high fashion and an irresistibly charming Lesley Manville add sparkle to the sweet, light-as-air MRS HARRIS GOES TO PARIS, an uplifting tale in which an older British house cleaner falls in love with a Dior dress and decides she must have one of her own. It is a grown-up fairy-tale that fits neatly into a familiar genre of British films dealing with the divide between the working class and the aristocratic one. Set in 1957, MRS HARRIS GOES TO PARIS also showcases mid-century couture fashion, with recreations of actual Christian Dior period dress designs, with other visual delights by costume designer Jenny Beavan, the creative force behind the fashions in last year’s CRUELLA.

An outstanding and nuanced performance by Lesley Manville lifts this film, and along with the wonderful mid-century period fashions, is the major enjoyment and reason to see this film, which is a sweet but unsurprising feel-good fantasy, despite a team of writers who tried to interject a little reality, with mixed results. Fans of Mike Leigh’s films and British dramas already know how excellent the talented Lesley Manville is, but she gained some wider recognition for her Oscar-nominated turn in PHANTON THREAD and hopefully with this film, that rise in recognition will continue.

In 1957 London, Ada Harris (Lesley Manville) has been waiting for her beloved husband Eddie to return from WWII, ever since the plane he was flying was shot down. Twelve years later, he still is listed as missing-in-action and Mrs Harris continues to hope for his return, as she ekes out a living by cheerfully cleaning the homes of more affluent people who hardly have any awareness of her beyond her job. The days of this sweet, kindly, unassuming working-class woman revolve around her work and life in her tiny basement apartment, although her lively best friend, neighbor and fellow cleaner Vi (Ellen Thomas) tries to draw her out.

One day, while cleaning the home of an aristocratic but cash-strapped client, the wife (Anna Chancellor) shows Mrs. Harris a beautiful Dior dress she just bought for an upcoming social event, despite being several weeks in arrears to her cleaner, a 500-pound purchase she plans to conceal from her husband. Instantly, Mrs Harris is smitten by the dazzling dress, and despite the high price, she determines to buy one for herself, as her one splurge in her drab life.

That she has nowhere to wear such a fancy dress does not matter to Mrs Harris. She sets out to scrimp and scrub to raise the money to buy her own Dior couture dress, despite the absurdity of a working-class cleaner spending her money to own such a expensive frock. That she has nowhere to wear a couture dress is brought up to her over and over again as she shares her dream, but it does nothing to dampen her ambition or ardor. With help from with her friend Vi (Ellen Thomas) and a roguish Irish bookie named Archie (Jason Isaacs), Mrs Harris finds a way to try to make her dream come through. After a few set-backs and some strokes of good luck, Mrs Harris does head for Paris and the House of Dior.

There is a lot of wish-fulfillment fantasy in director Anthony Fabian’s tale of later-life dreams, based on the 1958 novel by Paul Gallico. This is not the first filmed adaptation of Gallico’s story – in fact, it is one of several tellings of this working-class, middle-age fantasy. However, co-writers Carroll Cartwright, Olivia Hetreed and Keith Thompson worked on the script to inject some surprising, even sobering, moments of reality into the fairy tale sweetness, although with mixed results.

One of the refreshing parts of this story is Mrs. Harris’ single ambition. The down-to-earth Londoner only dreams of owning a fabulous dress, not remaking her life, social-climbing or finding late-life love. This gives her a freshness and grounding that Manville uses to give the character depth as well as making her lovable and inspirational. Of course, some of those other possibilities are raised along the way, but Manville’s performance elevates the character above the script.

Once in Paris, some of the script’s mix of reality and fantasy crops up, with the clueless, optimistic Mrs. Harris having no idea how to even get to House of Dior, much less any awareness of the audacity of her plan to simply walk in. But Manville ensures we can’t help both believe what happens and be charmed and amused by her character’s pluck, as her good-natured directness and kindness win her allies to help her to do just that.

But there are obstacles to overcome. Isabelle Huppert plays Dior’s stern manager and gatekeeper, Claudine Colbert, who tries to head off the working-class widow when Ada Harris tries to sit in on a showing of the new Dior collection. Huppert’s gatekeeper is overruled by a wealthy patron, the Marquis de Chassagne (Lambert Wilson), an Anglophile widower, who offers Mrs. Harris a spot as his plus-one as well as his arm, and by the surprising fact that the charwoman is planning to pay with cash – and flashes the bills to prove it – which persuades Dior’s accountant Andre (Lucas Bravo, EMILY IN PARIS) and even the designer himself (Philippe Bertin) to let her in, as cash-flow has been a bit of an issue of late.

Of course, we get a fashion show, and here costume designer Jenny Beavan gets to shine as audiences are treated to eye-candy in the form of diverse and gorgeous models in flood of beautiful period Dior couture, dresses recreated with the cooperation of House of Dior from their archival collections. Beavan supplements those visual delights with her own luscious designs, making the whole Paris sequence particularly colorful and visually pleasing.

Mrs. Harris expected she could pick out her couture frock and then zip back home, clueless about the need for fittings for the custom dress. But like in any good fairy tale, she gets help. Accountant Andre who offers her the use of his absent sister’s room in the Montmartre apartment they share, and she gets a ride there from model Natasha (Alba Baptista), whom the kindly Englishwoman helped when the model stumbled while rushing into the design house entrance, and who it turns out is the “face of Dior.” While arriving for daily fittings, Mrs. Harris endears herself to the Dior staff, particularly the seamstresses and ordinary workers (and being handy with a needle herself, even helps out a bit), becoming a kind of folk hero to them. However, the top tailor, Monsieur Carré (Bertrand Poncet), is less taken with the frank British cleaner, who makes no attempt to conceal her working class background, but Mrs. Harris is aided by showroom assistant Marguerite (Roxane Duran) who sees the positive effect the unstoppable Ada Harris has on the staff, and intercedes between the haughty master fitter and the working-class client.

Isabelle Huppert’s character is Mrs Harris’ nemesis but ironically, Manville nabbed her Oscar nom for her performance as a similarly chilly gatekeeper to a house of fashion in PHANTOM THREAD. An indication of Manville’s remarkable level of acting skill is in the smooth ease with which she fits into each role. While some have long been well aware of Manville’s considerable talents, PHANTOM THREAD raised the underappreciated Manville’s profile more generally, and hopefully she will at some point gain the same kind of recognition given similar talents like Judi Dench and Helen Mirren. In fact Manville’s performance far exceeds the film she’s in, exploring nuances and aspects of that character well beyond the simple plot.

All the supporting cast are good, although Huppert’s character is so brittle that she does not work as well as a foil for Manville as might be hoped. Lambert Wilson’s Marquis offers a hint of romantic possibility for Mrs Harris, and Lucas Bravo as shy accountant Andre and Alba Baptista as model Natasha offer a little budding romance, although their discussions of Sartre veer rather towards cringe-worthy. Ellen Thomas as Ada’s Caribbean-born pal and Jason Isaacs as an Irish charmer do well as Ada’s friends, although hampered by some unfortunate datedness in the characters.

MRS. HARRIS GOES TO PARIS is a feel-good, all-ages tale with an uplifting and inspiring message, that might be too saccharine for some but which is elevated tremendously by a wonderful performance by Lesley Manville and also is filled with gorgeous delights for fashionistas.

MRS HARRIS GOES TO PARIS opens in theaters on Friday, July 15.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

MRS. HARRIS GOES TO PARIS New Poster And Trailer Features Lesley Manville, Isabelle Huppert And Jason Isaacs

Focus Features has released the delightful poster and trailer for MRS. HARRIS GOES TO PARIS, the enchanting tale of a seemingly ordinary British housekeeper whose dream to own a couture Christian Dior gown takes her on an extraordinary adventure to Paris. 

From Writer and Director Anthony Fabian, check out the preview now.

Starring Lesley Manville, Isabelle Huppert, Jason Isaacs, Anna Chancellor, Lambert Wilson, Alba Baptista, Lucas Bravo, Rose William, Focus Features will release MRS. HARRIS GOES TO PARIS in theaters on Friday, July 15, 2022.

https://www.focusfeatures.com/mrs-harris-goes-to-paris

Actor Lucas Bravo, director Tony Fabian and actor Lesley Manville on the set of MRS.HARRIS GOES TO PARIS, a Focus Features release. Credit: Liam Daniel / © 2021 Ada Films Ltd – Harris Squared Kft
Lesley Manville stars as Mrs. Harris in director Tony Fabian’s MRS.HARRIS GOES TO PARIS, a Focus Features release. Credit: Liam Daniel / © 2021 Ada Films Ltd – Harris Squared Kft