Allo Berlin? Ici Paris! (1932) Poster

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7/10
Hello, Berlin! This is Paris! Sounds somewhat ominous, doesn't it!
JohnHowardReid8 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Allo, Berlin? Ici Paris" (1932) is a comedy of mistaken identity starring a Josette Day so unattractively dressed and photographed that it's hard to credit that she actually is the very same entrancingly superlative beauty of Cocteau's delightful "Beauty and the Beast" (1946).

Fortunately, despite Josette Day's disappointing choice of wardrobe, the movie, "Hello, Berlin? This is Paris" distills plenty of atmosphere if nothing else and it is most imaginatively directed. I would say that Julien Duvivier was near his best in fact.

A pity I can't extend the same compliments for his next movie, a remake of his 1925 silent Poil de Carotte (1932) in which the direction is inclined to be much more static so that actors like Harry Baur can not only have their day, but have their way!
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9/10
All Duvivier is already there
didierfort1 May 2015
This is a bi-lingual film, as it happened quite often in French cinema, when there was a necessity for it: French actors (mainly actresses) speak French, German ones speak German, and they quite often offer their own translations, vocally.

This is not Duvivier's first talkie. He had already directed a melodrama, 'David Golder', with Harry Baur, then the outstanding (at least for the editing, if not for the story) 'The Five Accursed Gentlemen', both in 1931.

So, after 'great' (and somehow heavy) melodrama and exotic adventures flick, Duvivier is now entering another genre, some sort of ciné-roman, a sentimental story. But in flying colors!

First, the story. Simple and complicated in its details, but easy to follow for the viewer, it is tightly waterproofed. Duvivier shows there his trademark respect for the audience.

Then, the means. The score is not the movie forte, though it's not negligible nor boring. Once again, it is the editing which make the job. Many sequences are based on short cuts giving fast pace: the evocation of the main protagonists' work (the telephone linking the world together), the Paris tour (with recurrent gags), the solemn arrival of the 'President of the Trans-oceanic Republics' in Berlin under a driving rain, the official banquet, the final brawl. Through frames and cinematography, some images are testimonials to German impressionism. And the actors. They have the age of their parts (Josette Day was 18, Wolfgang Klein 20) and they act the way it has to be done in talking movies, already far from silent movies habits. (Nevertheless, you'll notice that the movie is almost entirely understandable without any sound: Duvivier gives a great importance to the writings, letters, telegrams, signs in the street, train station boards, clocks.) The rest of the cast is up to the task: Germaine Aussey, Karel Stepanek and Hans Henninger the Berlin pals, and Charles Redgie, in one of his usual parts seen elsewhere (Maurice Tourneur's 'Samson', Yves Mirande's 'Café de Paris'), verging to slapstick, but noir-ish, this time.

Finally, the meanings. All Duvivier's obsessions and concerns are already here. Innocence lost (the —litteral— deception of the heroes but also the strange insert of this 'president-king' surrounded by his many wives-virgins), loneliness in modern times (the 'Automat' restaurant in Berlin, the song in Montmartre cabaret and its effect on the audience), modern forms of consented slavery (work in the telephone centrals, stupid mass touring in Paris), and last but not least, the need and power of love (the song in Montmartre —the Christ is not that surprising, it's a wooden statue not misplaced here, a 'haut lieu' of artistry—, the happy resolution, which is not contrived and has many aspects, since not only Lily needs to forgive and show she's willing to, but Annette has the same though a bit twisted need for love, through seduction, and is too happy to see her former lover come back to her).

The movie takes us through an early thirties Paris (and then in a 'decaying' Berlin), and uses opposite or at least very different locations to contrasts the characters and their goals: 'Le Bal nègre' for Annette who tries to seduce Erich, 'Le Lapin à Gill' where Lily brings Max (she thinks he is Erich) and where is heard the song, 'Chanson lasse', our friend dbdumonteil told us about. (By the way, mon cher Didier, this is not the first mention of Duvivier's name inside the movie: the 'pneumatique' —sort of telegram— Annette is sending to her lover Dumont has "rue Duvivier" for subscribed address!)

Among the bizarre and/or funny inserted pieces, there is also this sequence with the 'Trans-oceanic' orchestra —after using German, then French, then English, the understanding will come through the 'Trans-oceanic' language, obviously invented, a moment that predates one of the funniest scenes of Guitry's 'The Pearls of the Crown'.

Well, that's enough to say my point: the third talkie directed by Duvivier is already a masterpiece, with great inventive editing, arch-efficient pace and tightness of the story-telling for this ciné-roman already full of Duvivier's vision and visions.

A powerful romance.

NB: I see on the IMDb page that the music of 'Chanson lasse' is here attributed to Armand Bernard (a French character actor of the funny kind who knew how to write good music too), but in the movie, during the sequence in 'Le Lapin à Gill", the Montmartre cabaret, it is announced like this: "lyrics of Julien Duvivier, music by Karol Rathaus", the author of the film score.

(Didier_fort at hotmail.com)
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Allo Users?This is Duvivier speaking.....
dbdumonteil24 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This may be a Duvivier movie but this does not derive from Duvivier's kind of stuff to even the smallest extent (Unless one scene counts,I'll return to it afterward).This is a comedy where the phone plays a prominent part,almost as important as in the thriller "sorry wrong number".In a way,it predates the American comedies of the 1935-1945 era.The" symmetrical" scenes when the boss scolds then fires the boy and the girl are a good stroke of inspiration.

Duvivier was a very educated man:to think that in 1932 he had his actors play in two languages (French and German).His actress ,Josette Day ,would be the Beauty in Cocteau's famous "la Belle et la Bête" (1945).She and her male partner are a handsome nice couple ,even if they only meet at the end of the movie.

Cause their "friends " ,in Germany and in France,have taken their place and they have been talking at cross-purposes for almost an hour without realizing it.

There 's a very strange scene:the one in the cabaret where a chanteuse sings a lugubrious tune "Chanson Lasse" (Tired song)while the camera focuses on a Christ (a Christ here?)hanging on the wall .And the emcee announces:"the words to the song are by Julien Duvivier!"It was probably the first time a director's name had been mentioned in his own film.In this short scene,Duvivier "le Mal-Aimant du Cinema Français " reveals himself .

I must be honest:"Allo Berlin ici Paris" is not my cup of tea;Julien Duvivier is my favorite French director,but I like him better when he paints the noir sides of the society we live in.
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9/10
A masterpiece of entertainment bustling with innovations
clanciai9 November 2020
Julien Duvuvier's third talkie is a wonder of happy whims, actually a grandiose experiment in fitting together all kinds of loose ends, but with a very pertinent story, a romance between Berlin and Paris by telephone, giving the film a marvellously tenable structure, but the main thing of the film is all the comic elements, the highlight being the banquet of the president with all its arrangements and circumstances, in which Duvivier really transcends all limits of hilarious possibilities by focussing on details and making them the dominating element - the whole film is a splendid caleidoscope of merry details fitting into each other. It's no more than an entertainment, but as such it is formidable.
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