It Started in Paradise

It Started in Paradise is a 1952 British drama film directed by Compton Bennett and starring Jane Hylton, Martita Hunt and Muriel Pavlow.[2]

It Started in Paradise
Theatrical release poster
Directed byCompton Bennett
Written byMarghanita Laski
Hugh Hastings
Produced bySergei Nolbandov
Leslie Parkyn
Earl St. John
StarringJane Hylton
Martita Hunt
Muriel Pavlow
CinematographyJack Cardiff
Edited byAlan Osbiston
Music byMalcolm Arnold
Production
company
British Film-Makers
Distributed byGeneral Film Distributors
Release date
  • 28 October 1952 (1952-10-28)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office£72,000[1]

Set in the world of haute couture, the film was squarely aimed at female audiences its storyline concerns an established master of her craft being usurped by a younger, ruthlessly ambitious underling, who then years later finds the same thing happening to her.

Plot

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In 1938, Mme. Alice, chief designer of a famous London fashion house, has lost her touch. Where once she was the most sought after designer in the city, now her creations seem locked in the past and clients are looking elsewhere for modern fashions. She is persuaded by her senior assistant Martha that she needs a long holiday to recapture her creative inspiration. Once Mme. Alice has departed the fiercely ambitious Martha, who has been biding her time for several years, launches a coup, designing and presenting a range of up-to-the-minute garments which are a huge success with the fashion media and bring clients flocking back to the salon. The financial backer of the business is delighted with the upturn in profits; Martha is promoted to chief designer. Although Mme. Alice upon her return retains her composure, she refuses to countenance the Salon's "Vulgar" new look; she prophesies Martha's doom, and walks out, parting forever from the fashion world.

Over the course of the next decade Martha, with the help of Alison, a talented girl she took on straight out of school, restores the house to its pre-eminent position in the London fashion world. She becomes so driven that she starts not to care whom she treads on in her quest to be the best in the business. Over the years while her professional career goes from strength to strength, she neglects friends, treats associates badly and makes business enemies.

By the start of the 1950s Martha too seems to have had her day; appreciation for her designs tapers off, after a failed love affair with a deceiving lothatio, and her reputation falls. Those she has alienated on the way up are only too happy to watch her on her way down. Meanwhile, Alison, having initially declined to return after finding great success in America, eventually decides to return after all, prompted more by loyalty to one whom she loves at the company more than for any sentimentality for Martha. Her own designs are acclaimed innovative and contemporary by all. Now, it's Alison who's 'in', and Martha who's 'out': the cycle may begin again.

Cast

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Production

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The film was made at Pinewood Studios with sets designed by the art director Edward Carrick. It was shot in Technicolor and is described by Hal Erickson of Allmovie as: "an unusually plush, Lana Turner-esque production to come from a British studio in the early 1950s".[citation needed]

Critical reception

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The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The idea seems to have been to make a sort of British All About Eve, set in the fashion world. Unfortunately, the writing, the playing and the direction painfully lack style, wit and penetration. Two small performances by Martita Hunt and Harold Lang suggest what might have been done. The colour photography is mainly unattractive, and the fashions implausible."[3]

The Times wrote: "The boldest pen may be excused from shying away like a nervous horse at a high fence from this truly deplorable film. Its world is the world of Haute Couture. It has probably got most of the details right and very admirable are some of the Technicolor backgrounds, but that is the most that can be said in its favour".[4]

The New York Times wrote: "have a tendency to run somewhat to froth". It concluded: "Well, let's be gentlemanly about it. Maybe there are those who can find some sort of excitement in the kind of lather worked up in this film". It did, however, comment that Ronald Squire had a few good lines and the visual portrayal of the dress salon was well defined.[5]

Guide to British Cinema described it as starting strongly, but with a disappointing climax.[6]

References

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  1. ^ BFI Collections: Michael Balcon Papers H3 reprinted in British Cinema of the 1950s: The Decline of Deference By Sue Harper, Vincent Porter p 41
  2. ^ "It Started in Paradise". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
  3. ^ "It Started in Paradise". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 19 (216): 173. 1 January 1952 – via ProQuest.
  4. ^ "New Films in London". The Times. No. 52459. 3 November 1952.
  5. ^ Crowther, Bosley (25 July 1953). "It Started in Paradise (1952)". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  6. ^ Mayer, Geoff (2003). Guide to British Cinema. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 212. ISBN 031330307X. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
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