For its genre, it is an almost perfect film. "Dream scenes" were concocted to showcase each alone, and both together, in production dance numbers. Second, Astaire and Caron were two of the best dancers, and also very good actors, that ever lived. So I naturally find the story compelling. A rich man seeing a talented person and wanting to help out anonymously. There she realizes Jervis is in fact her benefactor, he proposes, she accepts. She insists on meeting her benefactor, who lives in a mansion, sort of museum, that even gives art tours to the public. Julie eventually graduates, is lonely because she has never met "Daddy Long Legs", and has no place to go to after graduation. Later Julie visits NYC alone, ambassador to France is on next patio, at breakfast overhears what he thinks is hanky-panky, persuades Jervis to quit seeing Julie. They meet, hit it off despite their age difference, dance marvelously. Finds out his niece is one of her roommates, he goes to a college dance to visit his neice, but really to see Julie. Until over two years later, when he had forgotten about her, but her letters are called to his attention. The letters never get to Jervis, intercepted and filed by his staff. The only stipulation is that she write a letter weekly to "Mr Jones" to keep him informed of her progress. He becomes an anonymous sponsor and sends her to a college in Mass. He wanders upon a French orphanage, looking for a phone or ride, and spots the 18-yr-old orphan (Caron/Julie), so lively, bright, responsible, attending to the younger orphans. Wealthy American (Astaire/Jervis) is on an economic mission to France when their vehicle gets stuck in a ditch. It is well-established that the author of this screenplay changed the story quite a bit, for purposes of this Hollywood production, so comparing it to the book is moot. ![]() ![]() This is a movie and it should be appreciated on its own merits. I didn't read the book, nor do I think it is relevant. Fred Astaire was 56 and Leslie Caron 24 when this film came out, so it stretches the age thing a bit, but I suppose we can write that off as cultural differences among the French. ![]() I think this film, "Daddy Long Legs", is much better than its Imdb rating indicates.
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