Around the World in 80 Days

Around the World in 80 Days a look at a true classif filmGuest blogger Alyson Krier writes:

There are two ways that people can travel. Whether you’ve gone across the world or across town, you can probably distinguish the two.  There are those who will eat McDonald's wherever they can and listen to their all important iPod on a tour bus. They will read or snooze while traveling through beautiful new lands, rather than enjoy the view and insist on keeping their daily schedule wherever they are. But there is the other side of the coin, those who can turn any travel into a real journey. These people willingly immerse themselves within the new lands. They will dance with the natives, marvel at more than the regular tourist stops and try all the new flavors around them. In Around the World in 80 Days which sort of traveler would you become?

The film based on the Jules Verne novel begins in Victorian England with Phileas Fogg (David Niven) in need of a new butler, one who can keep up with his eccentric requests like taking the temperature of toast.  Young Spaniard Passepartout (Cantinflas) is willing to take the job, but his fist day of work isn’t as expected. Fogg has just taken a bet, over a card game with his other well-to-do friends, that he can travel around the entire world in just 80 days. So they pack up, load a carpet bag with cash and set out immediately only to learn that their original train plans have been slowed by an avalanche. With some quick wits and helpful connections they’re soon soaring over Europe in a hot air balloon.

In Spain, Passepartout gains them a ride on a ship by showing off his bullfighting skills. Through India, his daring wit saves a young princess (Shirley MacLaine) from being burned alive with her dead husband. And in America he’s a regular wild west cowboy trying to save the train as Indians attack. All the while, Fogg is reading the newspaper, enjoying his usual tea time or trying to tell brave tales about his card games.

There is more than the physical obstacle of basic travel that hinders Fogg and Passepartout. It seems that just before their departure, the bank of England was robbed. Suddenly Fogg is a prime suspect and that trip around the world is a great way to avoid arrest. Soon Mr. Fix (Robert Newton) is on their tail pretending to befriend and help them, but wants to make sure Fogg loses the bet...as well as his freedom once he’s back in England.

One great thing this film did for cinema history is popularize the cameo appearance. There are dozens of cameos throughout the film. There’s Buster Keaton, Frank Sinatra, Andy Devine, Ronald Colman and Cesar Romero, just to name a few. My favorite (and one of the few I actually noticed) was Red Skelton as the drunk American in a saloon.

What more can you ask from a film than a fun-filled adventure around the world? We’re taken from stuffy old England (no offense to my Brit readers), to the lively dances of Spain, through the Indian jungle on an elephant’s back, to the mystical land of China and across wild west America. All that, from one studio, in such a convincing way is amazing. And the whole adventure is a great ride just from your couch.  Sure, it deviates from the book a little, but some of those first flights in the hot air balloon are fabulous. Who wouldn’t want to snatch some snow from a mountain peak to chill some champagne?

In the end, I do believe this tale is about opening yourself up to new surroundings. Poor Fogg went all around the world, but could hardly deviate from his tea time.  But Passepartout can now revel about his adventures and never feels the need to mention a card game.

“Mr. Fogg, why must you be so… so British?”

With a life long love of film and writing, Alyson Krier has decided to watch and review all the Best Picture nominees throughout the history of the Academy Awards on her ever expanding blog, The Best Picture Project.

 
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  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1063274681 Irv Slifkin

    My grandmother took me to see this film during a re-release in the 1960s and I loved every minute of it, from the scenery to the cast to the lovely score. It has a rap of being one of the worst films to win an Academy Award for Best Picture, but as far as pure entertainment is concerned, it can;t be beat. Also, I wasn;t familiar with Cantinflas at the time and he makes the perfect Paspartout.

  • Luke

    I remember watching this film as a child and enjoying it very much. I always liked David Niven in almost any movie role. I will have to watch it again since I was unaware of the many cameo roles. I also thought Cantinflas made a great Paspartout.

  • Jim

    The last time I saw it, which I guess was the last century, I thought it was way over rated. Wasn't this a Mike Todd picture and wasn't he married to Elizabeth Taylor? And didn't he die before the movie was released and before the academy award vote for best picture?
    I believe the movie was filmed in Todd AO- a combination of CinemaScope and VistaVision- and was very expensive to make.

    Looking forward to your Blog!!

  • Larry Whitson

    Not only did "80 Days" popularize the cameo role, it INVENTED it! It was Mike Todd's idea to use the word to describe a small part by a big star!

  • Trippy Trellis

    The '50s, my favorite movie decade, had the two all-time worst Oscar winning movies: "The Greatest Show on Earth" and "Around the World in 80 Days".
    My favorites? "All About Eve" and "Gigi".

  • sophy

    So "80 Days" didn't have a great message? Big deal! It was ENTERTAINMENT, all you cinemasnobs! It was FUN! The public LOVED it! Too bad Oscars aren't awarded for enjoyable films anymore. Hello! The movie-watching public prefer to be entertained, not instructed or depressed.

  • Bill Blau

    Yes, a GREAT fun film. Available on an xlnt widescreen DVD from Warner Home Video. The old Movie Man recommends it highly. No real message, just plain good times. And the Oscar winning music of Victor Young, his last score before he left us. Buy it, watch it, revel in it, ENJOY it!

  • Ken A

    This film is best described as "travelog as art".
    This is one of the saddest of all best picture winners for all times. People often speak of 1939 as the Golden Year of Cinema...1956 was my pick for "Golden Year"...I don't know that there will ever be such a year again--the Epics: The 10 Commandments, Giant (with Taylor, Hudson, James Dean), War and Peace (Henry Fonda & Audrey Hepburn); the Musicals: Carousel and The King & I; the Dramas: Bus Stop (Marilyn Monroe's best role), Baby Doll, Friendly Persuasion, Anastasia, Lust for Life, Written on the Wind; THE Western: The Searchers (Ford's greatest); Foreign films: La Strada (Fellini's masterpiece) and The Red Balloon. Even the "B" films that year--Burton as "Alexander the Great", Robert Wise's "Helen of Troy", "High Society", "The Bad Seed" and the SciFi "Forbidden Planet" were interesting. That brings me to "80 Days" which was a limited-engagement, reserved-seating extravaganza featuring Todd-AO (kind of a poor man's 3D/Cinerama) and every star in the world, so that they could all vote for the film in the oscar balloting...beautifully filmed but rather silly. For my money, it's the only film which really doesn't hold up. Of all the above-mentioned films, "80 Days" comes in dead last at #20.

  • J Nicholas

    No one mentioned the most fascinating point about Cantinflas as far as I'm concerned. He was the most highly paid actor, not only in this film but in Hollywood at the time. He was Spains most lauded bullfighter. He was worth millions so he held out for a high price in what ever he did...and he got it. His acrobatic skills and wonderful expressionless face made the movie for me...as Jackie Chan's skills made the second movie. I like the first more though...I haven't met a remake I've been particularly fond of...how about you?

  • Chuck Neumann

    One great part of the film was the award winning musical score by Victor Young. The title song especially really helped sell the film. The movie was fun, wonderfully filmed in many great locations, and exciting in its own way. Not the Best Picture? I beg to differ.

  • Trippy Trellis

    Excuse me, J. Nicholas, but Cantinflas was not only Mexico's most popular comedian but also it's top box office star for forty years. He was known throughout Latin America as Mexico's Charles Chaplin.

  • Michael Levin

    Todd-AO was Mike Todd's response to the three-strip Cinerama. Todd said, "Someone has to say 'I love you' someday". This led tp the invention of the ultra-large Todd-AO. It's not 3D or Vistavision or even Cinerama. It's projected by a large camera lense. originally it had a curved screen to match Cinerama's "You're In the Picture" feeling. From South Pacific on, it became a flat screen film process. I believe the number of Todd-AO films made is relatively small, the process often used for extra-big roadshow films. "Cleopatra","The Agony and the Ecstsy" were non-musicals that used the process. "The SOund of Music" of course was also filmed in TODD-AO.

  • Elliot Fisch

    For years this was only available in a shortened version for TV which I thought was way overrated. The WB DVD release is of the full length roadshow version and is much more impressive and is beautifully restored. I've had a recording of the music score by Victor Young since it's original release (55 years!) and I never tire of listening to it. However, The King & I is a far better picture and certainly more memorable. It should have won best picture.

  • anne

    hi all..agree with most comments except the ones against this being a great film.as has been said 'great' doesnt need to be a masterpiece its based on entertainment value & this has it! one thing that was mentioned was the remake with jackie chan which i also have but not mentioned was the closer remake earlier than jackies starring of all people & doing a good job i think , pierce brosnan..also eric idle as paspartout. gigi - well i used to think it was good until you realise its about 'selling' an innocent young girl to a playboy of the time! also liked bali hai until i realised that was about a similar thing, a service man having his way with a very young woman only to not want to take her with him.not done at the time in his own country. sad to think these good musicals had sinister meanings behind them when it would have been easy to make them more accepptable stories & not socially controversial. thanks anne :)

  • anne

    btw i cant see how alyson thinks this movie is a good example of someone relishing in a lovely trip! the man is in a hurry! the fact that we see all the lovely sites etc that he experiences doesnt mean hes enjoying himself. ive never had the impression he enjoyed all the delays that gave us more to experience, foreign cultures, sights etc ..?? thanks anne :)

  • Tom Dimock

    A very enjoyable movie and gorgeous music score. But can anyone actually determine how many of the foreign countries were actually visited by the lead actors? A camera crew was sent around the world, but the numerous scenery shots are spliced in between close-ups of the stars. Look at the shot at the top of this page: it's a back lot, not China. On the elephant ride through the trees in "India", I saw pepper trees from California brushing against the camera. Lots of close-up shots of the stars on deck seats on ships, looking out of train windows, riding in a balloon, etc. I count England, France, and Spain (I think), plus Cantinflas on a horse in the hills between Simi Valley and Los Angeles. Still like the movie!

  • Jack Barrie

    Tom Dimock: According to the Internet Movie Database the filming locations are listed as: 20th Century Fox Studios - Westmister England - Paris -Madrid - Lone Pine California - Alamogordo New Mexico _ Bangkok - Hong Kong _Colorado and California , so they did move out of Hollywood for most of the filming. Also Todd-AO stood for Todd -( Michael Todd) - American Optical and was a 70mm process.

  • Deborah Green

    How many other movies out rate this one. It was horrible!! It made no sense at all. I agree that the 50's produced some of the best movies hollywood had to offer. My favorite All About Eve. This movie for some may have been about FUN but never should have received an Oscar.. COME ON!

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