![]() |
||||||||||||||
|
Darling Lili (1970) - full review!Directed & produced by Blake Edwards, who co-wrote the story with William Peter Blatty (who would go on to win an Oscar for The Exorcist (1973) screenplay), I would hardly classify this unique film as a Musical (as those on imdb.com have done), but I do agree that it's difficult to nail down to a single category. Yes, Edwards’s wife Julie Andrews is its star and she does sing a number of songs, but the plot is more espionage, with a corresponding romance, during World War I, than anything else. Plus, though it does contain the director's humorous touches not unlike those seen in his Pink Panther movies, the overall tone is quite a bit more serious. The film, which received Academy Award nominations for its Costume Design, Score, and the Henri Mancini-Johnny Mercer Original Song "Whistling in the Dark", bombed at the box office (which may be the reason Ms. Andrews didn't make another one until The Tamarind Seed (1974). Andrews plays Lili Smith, aka Schmidt, a German spy who's well known as a patriotic British singer in Paris during the war. Smith was actually born in the "motherland", but raised since she was 10 in London. Her controller, and lover, is German Colonel Kurt Von Ruger (Jeremy Kemp), who works for General Kessler (Carl Duering), who's not sure he trusts the Londoner. Her latest assignment involves seducing an American flight commander, Major William Larrabee (Rock Hudson), to learn his squadron's plans. Larrabee’s biplanes have had regular aerial conflicts with their German counterparts, one of which is the notorious ace Baron von Richtofen (Ingo Mogendorf), aka The Red Baron. These dogfights sequences are pretty good, though they do consume a lot of screen-time. It's at that point during World War I when these so called "silly little planes" have become strategic weapons, particularly for the Allies, while the Germans are still using Zeppelins for their bombing raids. Hence, Lili’s assignment is to get information from Larrabee, whom she calls Bill. During the course of the film, Andrews’s character sings many songs: when performing one night at a theater, she engages the frightened (by a German bombing run) London crowd into singing a rousing rendition of "Pack up your troubles in your old kit bag and smile, smile, smile"; she even gets some British soldiers to join her on stage. Another time, she sings at a hospital for some injured soldiers. A young lieutenant (Michael Witney) gets Lili to sing "It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary" in a Paris restaurant. The French even bestow upon her a "medal of freedom"-type honor for her patriotic deeds. It's safe to say that Lili is beyond reproach. In fact, two French secret service agents (Jacques Marin & André Maranne) actually ask for her assistance in their investigation of Major Larrabee as a possible spy! Herein lies most of the comic relief, since these two characters are a milder version of Inspector Clouseau; one of these actors (Maranne) was a Pink Panther series regular. The other slapstick scenes involve one of Larrabee’s squadron members, dubbed T. C. (Lance Percival), who's mostly in a drunken haze. Director Edwards chose to show the romance develop between Lili and Bill with largely wordless scenes (e.g. the two walk in the park holding hands while one hears only the film's score). It becomes clear that Lili has let her personal feelings affect her professional judgment. For instance, there is an important bit of information that Lili must extract from Bill, about an operation called Crepe Suzette. But, based on some information that Lili receives from Colonel Von Ruger, she suspects that Bill is two-timing her with a Paris striptease artist also named Crepe Suzette (Gloria Paul). The scene in which Lili witnesses Suzette perform is both sexy and funny, and prompts Lili into exhibiting herself during her next on-stage performance. There is a painfully long scene at a French chateau, during the rain no less, where Lili and Bill have escaped for a romantic weekend. Von Ruger turns up to give Lili some vital information while the French agents, Maj. Duvalle (Marin) and Lt. Liggett (Maranne), are also there to spy on the couple. After a falling out between the lovers, followed by some extended action sequences, everything works out fairly predictably in the end. Bernard Kay and Doreen play Lili’s butler & maid, respectively, who are also part of the spy team; Vernon Dobtcheff plays an assassin who works for Kessler. |
Find your movie or DVD now @:
![]() Most Recent Additions: Casanova Brown (1944) - full review! I Want You (1951) - full review! A Bill of Divorcement (1932) - full review! Patterns (1956) - full review! Last Train from Gun Hill (1959) - full review! Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) - full review! Hour of the Gun (1967) - full review! To Sir, with Love (1967) - full review! You'll Never Get Rich (1941) - full review! The Actress (1953) - full review! Mannequin (1937) - full review! All My Sons (1948) - full review! Mourning Becomes Electra (1947) - full review! State Fair (1945) - full review! Billy Budd (1962) - full review! Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (1951) - full review! The Bachelor Party (1957) - full review! The Glenn Miller Story (1954) - full review! The Southerner (1945) - full review! The Russians Are Coming the Russians Are Coming (1966) Never on Sunday (1960) - full review! The Arrangement (1969) - full review! A Summer Place (1959) - full review! Miracle in the Rain (1956) - full review! Love Letters (1945) - full review! The Story of Dr. Wassell (1944) - full review! The Absent Minded Professor (1961) 20000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954) Come and Get It (1936) - full review! The Prize (1963) - full review! This Is the Army (1943) - full review! Home from the Hill (1960) - full review! Hangmen Also Die (1943) - full review! The Shop on Main Street (1965) - full review! The Good Guys and the Bad Guys (1969) - full review! A Gathering of Eagles (1963) - full review! This Happy Breed (1944) - full review! Red-Headed Woman (1932) - full review! Waterloo Bridge (1931) - full review! Baby Face (1933) - full review! Titanic (1943) - full review! Cover Girl (1944) - full review! Saratoga Trunk (1945) - full review! Murder on the Orient Express (1974) The Young Philadelphians (1959) - full review! Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) Pocket Money (1972) - full review! Week-End at the Waldorf (1945) Judge Priest (1934) - full review! Broadway Melody of 1936 (1935) - full review! The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) Angel Face (1952) - full review! The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959) - full review! Dallas (1950) - full review! Springfield Rifle (1952) - full review! Gaslight (1940) - full review! The Gazebo (1959) - full review! Passage to Marseille (1944) - full review! The House on 56th Street (1933) - full review! Annie Get Your Gun (1950) - full review! Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) Lonelyhearts (1958) - full review! Good News (1947) - full review! Wild Rovers (1971) - full review! Lovers and Other Strangers (1970) - full review! Topper Returns (1941) - full review! |
||||||||||||
[Home] [Hitchcock] [Oscar's Best] [Essays] [Essential Films] [TCM Picks] [Obscure Films] [Links] [Other Reviews] [Academy Awards] [Silent Films] [Movie Index] |
||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |