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Irma la Douce

 
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Irma La Douce

  • Director: Billy Wilder
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Comedy of Manners, Romantic Comedy
  • Themes: Prostitutes
  • Main Cast: Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Lou Jacobi, Bruce Yarnell, Herschel Bernardi, Sheryl Deauville
  • Release Year: 1963
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 144 minutes

Plot

This romantic comedy opens with a resounding warning: its chief concerns are passion, bloodshed, desire, and death. "Everything," exclaims the narrator, "that makes life worth living." Irma La Douce (Shirley MacClaine) is Paris' most prosperous prostitute. Wise, endearing, and compulsively clad in green, Irma rules the rue Casanova. She triumphantly works the most coveted corner on a street where the cops gladly look the other way and the naughty johns leave tips. Her street is a content community of live and let live and good-natured desire, an Augean stable of human understanding. However, to upright Nester Patou (Jack Lemmon), the area's new policeman, genial wrongdoing is still wrongdoing. Freshly promoted from day patrol at a children's playground, the scrupulous Nestor arrests Irma and her colleagues in a bumbling, unauthorized raid. He takes pity on Irma, but harasses the guilty johns -- including the police captain. Promptly unemployed, Nester returns to the scene of his crime, the rue, and to Irma. After physically besting her pimp, Nester unwittingly takes his position. The two fall madly in love, but Nestor quickly grows jealous of Irma's patrons. Thus, he masquerades as a wealthy English aristocrat and becomes Irma's sole customer -- only to eventually grow violently jealous of himself. Soon enough, this formally righteous cop is comically jailed for his own brutal murder! As the film's prologue promises, Irma La Douce is a celebration of life from beginning to end -- unabashedly adoring lust, emotion, fervor and, above all, foolish love. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide

Cast

Hope Holiday - Lolita; Joan Shawlee - Amazon Annie; Grace Lee Whitney - Kiki the Cossack; Paul Dubov - Andre; Howard McNear - Concierge; Cliff Osmond - Police Sergeant; Diki Lerner - Jojo; Herb Jones - Casablanca Charlie; Tura Satana - Suzette Wong; Lou Krugman - First Customer; James Brown - Texan Customer; Bill Bixby - Tattooed Sailor; Harriet Young - Mimi the Mau Mau; Billy Beck - Officer Dupont; Edgar Barrier - General Lafayette; Richard Peel - Englishman; Joe Palma - Prison Guard; John Alvin - Customer; Donald Diamond - Man With Samples; Louis Jourdan - Narrator; James Caan

Credit

Alexandre Trauner - Art Director, I.A.L. Diamond - Associate Producer, Doane Harrison - Associate Producer, Wally Green - Choreography, Orry-Kelly - Costume Designer, Hal W. Polaire - First Assistant Director, Billy Wilder - Director, Dan Mandell - Editor, Andre Previn - Composer (Music Score), Frank Westmore - Makeup, Emile LaVigne - Makeup, Harry Ray - Makeup, Joseph La Shelle - Cinematographer, Billy Wilder - Producer, Edward Boyle - Set Designer, Maurice Barnathan - Set Designer, Milt Rice - Special Effects, I.A.L. Diamond - Screenwriter, Billy Wilder - Screenwriter, Irene Caine - Costumes Supervisor, Alexandre Breffort - Play Author

Similar Movies

Sweet Charity; Never on Sunday
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Wikipedia: Irma la Douce
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This article is about the film. For the stage musical, see Irma La Douce (musical)
Irma la Douce

Original movie cover
Directed by Billy Wilder
Produced by Billy Wilder
I. A. L. Diamond
Edward L. Alperson
Doane Harrison
Alexandre Trauner
Written by Billy Wilder
I. A. L. Diamond
Alexandre Breffort (play)
Starring Jack Lemmon
Shirley MacLaine
Music by André Previn
Cinematography Joseph LaShelle
Editing by Daniel Mandell
Distributed by The Mirisch Corporation
Release date(s) June 5, 1963
Running time 147 mins.
Language English

Irma la Douce is a 1963 comedy starring Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine, directed by Billy Wilder

Contents

Plot

The film version of Irma la Douce (which means "Irma the Sweet") tells the story of Nestor Patou (Jack Lemmon), an honest policeman who finds a street full of prostitutes in Paris and reports them. The police inspector has been aware of those prostitutes but let them off by accepting bribes, so he fires Nestor who is conveniently framed for bribery. Kicked off the force, Nestor finds himself drawn to the very neighborhood of Paris that ended his career with the Paris police - returning to Chez Moustache, a popular hangout for prostitutes and their pimps. Down on his luck, Nestor becomes close friends with Irma La Douce (Shirley MacLaine), a popular prostitute. He also reluctantly accepts as a confidante, the proprietor of Chez Moustache, a man known only as "Moustache". (In a running joke, Moustache (Lou Jacobi), a seemingly ordinary barkeep, suggests a storied prior life - claiming to have been, among other things, an attorney and a doctor, ending with the repeated line "but that's another story".) After Irma dumps her pimp boyfriend, Nestor moves in with her, and he soon finds himself as Irma's new pimp.

Jealous of the thought of Irma with other men, Nestor comes up with a plan to stop Irma's prostitution. But he soon finds out that it's not all that it's cracked up to be. Nestor invents an alter-ego he calls "Lord X", a British peer who becomes Irma's single client. Nestor's plans to keep Irma off the streets soon backfire and she becomes suspicious, since Nestor must work long and hard to earn the cash "Lord X" pays Irma. When Irma decides to leave Paris with the fictitious Lord X, Nestor decides to end the charade. Unaware that he's being tailed by Irma's former pimp, Nestor finds a secluded stretch along the river Seine and tosses his disguise into it. The pimp, missing Nestor change into his clothes, but also seeing Lord X's clothes floating in the water, concludes that Nestor murdered him. Arrested by the police, Nestor is advised by Moustache against revealing that Lord X was a fabrication. "The jails are full with innocent people because they told the truth" the barkeep claims. Following Moustache's advice, Nestor admits killing Lord X, but only because of his love for Irma.

Hauled off to jail, but with Irma in love with him, Nestor is sentenced to 15 years, hard labor. Learning that Irma is very pregnant, and with Moustache's help, Nestor escapes from prison and returns to Irma. Nestor narrowly avoids being recaptured when the police search for him in Irma's apartment - donning his old uniform, Nestor simply blends in with the other policemen. With the help of Irma's ex-pimp, Nestor arranges for the police to search for him along the Seine from which, dressed as Lord X, he emerges. Knowing he can't be rearrested for a murder that Police now know didn't occur, Nestor rushes to Church where he plans to marry Irma. They barely make it through the ceremony before Irma delivers their baby. While Nestor and everyone else is occupied with Irma, Moustache notices one of the guests sitting alone in the front row. Rising from his seat and walking past Moustache, the guest is none other than Lord X! A clearly baffled Moustache looks at Lord X, and then at the audience. "But that's another story", he says.

Synopsis

Though the film is not a musical, it won André Previn an Academy Award for Best Score—Adaptation or Treatment. There is also a scene in the film, in which Shirley MacLaine exclaims "Dis-donc!" whilst dancing on a table, which appears to be a deliberate tribute to the musical from which the film is derived.

The film was nominated for Best Actress in a Leading Role (Shirley MacLaine) and Best Cinematography, Color.

Cast

Soundtrack

Irma La Douce
Soundtrack by André Previn
Released 13 July, 1998
Label Rykodisc

All compositions by André Previn.

  1. "Main Title" 2:14
  2. "Meet Irma" 1:42
  3. "This Is the Story" 3:16
  4. "Nestor the Honest Policeman" 1:54
  5. "Our Language of Love" 2:04
  6. "Don't Take All Night" 5:43
  7. "The Market" 6:28
  8. "Easy Living the Hard Way" 3:16
  9. "Escape" 2:13
  10. "Wedding Ring" 1:35
  11. "The Return of Lord X" 1:24
  12. "In the Tub with Fieldglasses" 2:27
  13. "Goodbye Lord X" 3:17
  14. "I'm Sorry Irma" 1:38
  15. "Juke Box: Let's Pretend Love" 3:07
  16. "Juke Box: Look Again" 2:16
  17. "But That's Another Story" 0:38

Trivia

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