Entertainment

Film Review: Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris is simply delightful

If you are a couture fan, this film will thrill your aesthetics as much as they thrill Ada

Poster of Mrs. Harris goes to Paris
Poster of Mrs. Harris goes to Paris Twitter

Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris (Prime Video)

Rating: *** 1/2 (three and a half)

The underrated, monstrously gifted Lesley Manville is the life, soul and breath of this enchanting nugget about a lonely British househelp woman (with two incredibly supportive friends) in London in 1957 who comes into some unexpected money. Instead of putting the fortune away for a rainy day, Ada travels to Paris to buy herself an expensive Christian Dior dress.

It is a hideously inappropriate self-indulgence for a woman in a recession-hit society where Ada loses her job quickly. Refreshingly Ada doesn’t sit and mourn. Not for long. Armed with the widow’s pension, she sets off to chase a dream in the city of dreams, Paris. It is a terrific notion to liberate a widow from her mourning straight to her evening of self-fulfillment in an era when action spoke louder than words and every action was targeted by moralists and prudes as a sign of sinful pleasure pursuit.

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The images in the Christian Dior property in Paris are straight from a  fairytale. If you are a couture fan, this film will thrill your aesthetics as  much as they thrill Ada. All those divine dresses floating around Ada…she feels she is in a dream.

So do we. Director Anthony Fabian (loved his two early directorials Skin and Louder Than Words, especially the former) places Ada in a bubble of self-gratification. We are allowed neither to judge nor disapprove of her blithe choices in life.

That flaming-red Christian Dior dress is what she will have. Like watching a derby horse hoof it to the finishing line, we follow Ada’s dream right to its logical conclusion. There is something distinctly fairytale-like in the way Ada gets her dream dress. Although set during a time when society was in flux, there seems to be little here to disturb Ada’s dreamscape beyond the initial shock of being declared a war widow. But that too comes with a price, in a good way, as Ada gets a widow’s pension that makes her fly off into her dream.

Seen as a fairytale, Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris is as charming as Cinderella on a flight instead of a stagecoach. In Paris, she meets only gracious helpful people who help her realize her dream. There is the legendary French actress Isabelle Huppert playing the spoilsport. But even she purrs like a cat before too long.

This is a charming dream-come-true film shot with restrained grace and feeling.

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