A Tale of Five Cities
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A Tale of Five Cities (Template:Langx and released as A Tale of Five Women in the US) is a 1951 British-Italian international co-production comedy drama film directed by Romolo Marcellini, Emil E. Reinert, Wolfgang Staudte, Montgomery Tully, Irma von Cube and Géza von Cziffra.[1] It was written by Maurice J. Wilson, Jacques Companéez, Patrick Kirwan, Richard Llewellyn, Alexander Paal, Piero Tellini and Günther Weisenborn.
The five cities cited in the title are: Rome, Paris, Berlin, London, and Vienna.[2]
Plot
Englishman Bob Mitchell leaves his longtime home in America to enlist in the Royal Air Force. After the war has ended, a drunken accident in a Berlin nightclub results in his losing his memory.
As he has no identity tags, doctors mistakenly repatriate him to America, where magazine writer Lesley learns of his condition. The only evidence of his past is a set of five bank notes from different countries, each signed with a woman's name.
Lesley's magazine sponsors a trip for him to visit the five countries where the bank notes were issued, hoping he can find details of his identity.
Cast
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- Bonar Colleano as Bob Mitchell
- Barbara Kelly as Lesley, American magazine writer
- Anne Vernon as Jeannine Meunier
- Karin Himboldt as Charlotte Smith (as Karin Himbold)
- Lily Kann as Charlady (as Lily Kahn)
- Danny Green as Levinsky
- Carl Jaffe as Charlotte's brother
- MacDonald Parke as New York magazine editor
- Althea Orr as Matron (as Aletha Orr)
- Lana Morris as Delia Morel Romanoff
- Eva Bartok as Kathaline Telek
- Gina Lollobrigida as Maria Severini
- Geoffrey Sumner as Wingco
- Philip Leaver as Italian official
- Annette Poivre as Annette
- Charles Irwin as London editor
- Arthur Gomez as Carabinieri
- Andrew Irvine as Jimmy
- Raymond Bussières as Jeannine's brother
- Marcello Mastroianni as Aldo Mazzetti
- Enzo Staiola as boy
- Peter Marr as child eating soup
Production
Shooting took place at the Riverside Studios and Walton Studios as well as on location around the various cities. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Don Russell, Jean d'Eaubonne, Fritz Jüptner-Jonstorff and Walter Kutz.[3]
Critical reception
Kine Weekly said "Omnibus romantic comedy melodrama. Prodigious and original, it accompanies an amnesia victim, formerly an officer in the RAF on an identity-seeking mission to various European capitals, sponsored by an American magazine. First-rate British offering."[4]
Monthly Film Bulletin said "The story, stretching coincidence as it does, is highly improbable, and the script fragmentary. A Tale of Five Cities, too, has failed to make as much use as might be expected of the opportunities provided by the varied locations. As a whole, indeed, the film suffers from trying to cover too much ground, and to include too many varied stories. Much of it is superficial and unoriginal. But there are some pleasant humorous touches and, although many of the players seem inexperienced, Bonar Colleano does adequately as the bewildered young man."[5]
Leslie Halliwell said: "Tedious pattern drama remarkable only for its then untried cast."[6]
In British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959 David Quinlan rated the film as "mediocre", writing: "Some authentic atmosphere, otherwise a misfire."[7]
References
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External links
- Script error: No such module "If empty". at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:WikidataCheck
- Pages with script errors
- Pages using infobox film with flag icon
- 1951 films
- 1951 drama films
- Italian drama films
- British drama films
- Austrian drama films
- French drama films
- West German films
- 1950s Italian-language films
- English-language Austrian films
- English-language French films
- English-language German films
- English-language Italian films
- British black-and-white films
- Italian black-and-white films
- Films set in London
- Films directed by Romolo Marcellini
- British anthology films
- Films directed by Géza von Cziffra
- Films directed by Emil-Edwin Reinert
- British multilingual films
- Italian multilingual films
- Films with screenplays by Patrick Kirwan
- Italian anthology films
- French anthology films
- German anthology films
- 1950s British films
- 1950s Italian films
- 1950s French films
- Films scored by Hans May