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The Happy Road

  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
474
YOUR RATING
Gene Kelly and Barbara Laage in The Happy Road (1957)
An American boy and a French girl run away from a Swiss school making for Paris to reunite with their parents. The boy's father and the girl's mother join forces, despite cultural differences, to search for their kids.
Play trailer3:24
1 Video
51 Photos
Comedy

An American boy and a French girl run away from a Swiss school making for Paris to reunite with their parents. The boy's father and the girl's mother join forces, despite cultural difference... Read allAn American boy and a French girl run away from a Swiss school making for Paris to reunite with their parents. The boy's father and the girl's mother join forces, despite cultural differences, to search for their kids.An American boy and a French girl run away from a Swiss school making for Paris to reunite with their parents. The boy's father and the girl's mother join forces, despite cultural differences, to search for their kids.

  • Director
    • Gene Kelly
  • Writers
    • Arthur Julian
    • Joe Morheim
    • Harry Kurnitz
  • Stars
    • Gene Kelly
    • Barbara Laage
    • Michael Redgrave
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    474
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gene Kelly
    • Writers
      • Arthur Julian
      • Joe Morheim
      • Harry Kurnitz
    • Stars
      • Gene Kelly
      • Barbara Laage
      • Michael Redgrave
    • 12User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:24
    Official Trailer

    Photos51

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    Top cast38

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    Gene Kelly
    Gene Kelly
    • Mike Andrews
    Barbara Laage
    Barbara Laage
    • Suzanne Duval
    Michael Redgrave
    Michael Redgrave
    • Gen. Medworth
    Bobby Clark
    • Danny Andrews
    Brigitte Fossey
    Brigitte Fossey
    • Janine Duval
    Roger Tréville
    Roger Tréville
    • Dr. Solaise
    Colette Deréal
    • Hélène
    Jess Hahn
    Jess Hahn
    • MP Sgt. Morgan
    Maryse Martin
    Maryse Martin
    • The Mother
    Roger Saget
    • Fat man in 4cv
    Van Doude
    Van Doude
    • French Motorcycle Officer
    Claire Gérard
    • Patronne d'hotel in Valval
    Colin Mann
    • Armbruster
    Alexandre Rignault
    Alexandre Rignault
    • Woodcutter
    T. Bartlett
    • David, Earl of Boardingham
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Bouillaud
    • Driver of truck in the ditch
    • (uncredited)
    Christian Brocard
    Christian Brocard
    • Workman with statue
    • (uncredited)
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    • Young lover at the Guinguette
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Gene Kelly
    • Writers
      • Arthur Julian
      • Joe Morheim
      • Harry Kurnitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.9474
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    Featured reviews

    6SnoopyStyle

    some kiddie fun

    Danny Andrews is running away to Paris from his Swiss boarding school. He's joined by Janine Duval. Danny's widowed father Michael Andrews (Gene Kelly) is struggling to renovate his Paris office. Suzanne Duval (Barbara Laage) is Janine's divorced French mother. The two parents put their differences aside to look for their two kids.

    I like the kids' adventures. The adults are less fun even though they have Gene Kelly. The military is ridiculous. This alternates between bland silliness and fun. I want the kids to stay together more than the adults.
    6bkoganbing

    "Love And Try To Be Loved And Life Is A Happy Road"

    The Happy Road was Gene Kelly's next to last film on his MGM contract and this was a personal project in which he not only starred in, but directed and produced as well. Probably something to pass the time of day while he was waiting for his final full blown musical Les Girls.

    The film is best however when the kids are in front of the camera. The very simple story involves Kelly's son Bobby Clark who runs away from the Swiss boarding school his father has put him in to go to Paris and be with him. He also wants to prove how self reliant is. His good friend Brigette Fossey decides to join him on the odyssey and prove the same to her divorcée mother Barbara Laage.

    Whatever else they do, the kids prove they're self reliant, they have the French police totally at their wits end, not to mention a bunch of NATO troops out on maneuvers, embarrassing their commanding officer Michael Redgrave no end.

    Kelly is a concerned father, but he's also a poster child for the ugly American. He wasn't doing all that much for Franco-American relations with his exasperation about the French way of doing things. Laage kind of smooths out the rough edges in him by the time film ends.

    With a title song sung over the opening credits by Maurice Chevalier and the film shot in France, The Happy Road will not rank as one of Gene Kelly's great films. But it's a pleasant diversion and very good for juvenile audiences.
    4F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Franco-American spaghetti

    I dislike children's movies like "The Happy Road" which romanticise the experiences of runaway children. In kids' movies, runaways tend to have lots of fun and get into little or no danger, having adventures with picturesque hobos and indulgent old ladies. I dread the thought of what might happen to a mildly troubled child nowadays who sees one of these unrealistic old movies and decides to solve his (or her) problems by running away from home... into the clutches of crack addicts and perverts.

    Gene Kelly was an ardent Francophile who seriously compromised his great career at MGM by doing several dodgy projects which gave him an opportunity to work in his beloved France. "The Happy Road" is one such project. It's a decent little film, proficiently made ... but if Kelly had decided not to make this movie, there would probably be one more great or near-great MGM musical among his credits.

    The movie opens nicely with the distinctive voice of Maurice Chevalier on the soundtrack, singing the indifferent title song. (We never see Chevalier in this movie, and we never hear him again after the opening credits.) Kelly plays Mike Andrews: a widowed entertainer, an American in Paris (oops, wrong movie!) who is the star of a big nightclub act ... although, judging from the seedy little nightclub where we see him rehearsing, maybe he's not such a big star after all. Mike has a son Danny, about 10 years old, whom he's dumped in a boarding school in Switzerland. (I wonder if this is the same boarding school in Switzerland where Sylvester Stallone hid from the draft board during the Vietnam war.) One of Danny's schoolmates is Janeane Duval, a French girl his own age. Conveniently, Janeane has no father because her mother is divorced. (Hmm: a single father, a single mother ... I wonder how this movie will end.)

    Mike decides to run away to Paris so he can live with his father, not bothering to realise that his father chose to get rid of him in the first place. (Kelly's screen character here is less sympathetic than perhaps Kelly intended.) Janeane wants to run away to Paris too, so she can be with her mother. But Janeane is afraid to run away by herself (smart girl); she wants to come along with Danny so he can protect her (stupid girl). Danny is in the 'girls have cooties' stage, so he wants nothing to do with Janeane ... but she speaks French and he doesn't (this is a boy attending school in Switzerland, remember), so he reluctantly decides to let Janeane come with him ... especially since she kindly baked him a chocolate fairy cake. (Which he immediately scoffs at the very beginning of their journey.)

    When the school notifies Danny's dad and Janeane's mum that their brats have taken French leave, the two parents join forces to find their children. Along the road, Danny and Janeane meet other Eurobrats who help them. Most of the plot devices in this movie are both extremely implausible and highly predictable. Also, the child actors are given some annoyingly "wise" dialogue about global politics and other deep subjects. Michael Redgrave gives a semi-comic performance as the commander of a British regiment on field manoeuvres, and Roger Van Doude is quite funny as a Clouseau-like gendarme. There's a truly bizarre performance by a small boy in the brief role of an English peer. The child actors who play Danny and Janeane are surprisingly competent. Gene Kelly's direction is workmanlike: not nearly as skillful as his direction on some later big-budget Hollywood films.

    I'll rate 'The Happy Road' 4 points out of 10. I recommend it for children, but only if an adult guardian explains to them that runaway children in the REAL world usually have a lot less fun and a lot more danger.

    UPDATE: IMDb reviewer 'Hemingway and the Sea' calls me 'under-educated with an innate dislike for this type of movie'. Actually, I'm SELF-educated, and I've an innate dislike for any movie (such as this one) which depicts runaway children having romantic adventures with helpful strangers and picturesque tramps. The children in the audience need to know that running away from an abusive environment (to anywhere but to the authorities) can put them in deadly danger.

    Also, 'Hemingway' accuses me of making 'political statements' about Gene Kelly. I merely called Kelly a Francophile: that's a social statement. Gene Kelly was very clear about why he left the Arthur Freed unit at MGM: by spending a year in France and London, Kelly was able to take lawful advantage of a loophole in the U.S. tax code. But in that wretched year, Kelly made two very weak French films and an unfinished British production. If he had stayed at MGM, we might now have one more Gene Kelly masterpiece on a par with "Singin' in the Rain" or "An American in Paris" (which, despite its title, was filmed entirely in Culver City). My opinion of 'The Happy Road' remains unchanged.
    7atlasmb

    A lightweight Gene Kelly production

    This film is a comedy adventure story about an American boy and a French girl who escape their Swiss boarding school and set off for Paris, where their parents live. Gene Kelly plays the boy's father, Mike, and Barbara Laage plays Suzanne, the mother of the girl.

    Directed and produced by Gene Kelly, "The Happy Road" is just that--a happy story about life on the road. There is never any real angst over the missing children. The film plays as a farce among the small towns and back roads of France. In some parts there is little dialogue, reminiscent of Mr. Hulot. This is another example of Mr. Kelly creatively branching out from the traditional format of musicals.

    Thrust together by circumstance, the two parents, trade barbs about Americans and French, but learn to cooperate as their children thwart the efforts of gendarmes and generals trying to intercept their path.

    Children might enjoy this film as much as, or more than, adults.
    3planktonrules

    Amazingly bland.

    Gene Kelly produced, directed and starred in "The Happy Road". According to TCM when they aired it, Kelly had no work despite being under contract with MGM and so he made this movie in Europe. In hindsight, I think he should have just gone there on vacation.

    The story begins with two kids sneaking away from their boarding school in Switzerland. Danny (Bobby Clark) is running away because he misses his father (Kelly) who is working in Paris. Janine (Brigitte Fossey) tags along because she thinks Danny is wonderful! Soon, the frightened parents spring into action and go in search of their kids.

    There are many problems with the film--and they boil down to the script. The children and their parts worked well...the adults, on the other hand, were written badly...particularly Kelly's role. He played an overly stereotypical ugly American--who constantly was angry because the French didn't act just like Americans. Annoying, to say the least...but so was much of the interaction between the adults. The script was just not particularly good nor interesting when it came to these parents...and the nice moments with the kids wasn't enough to save this one.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The company that co-produced is called Kerry, after Gene Kelly's daughter.
    • Goofs
      At the very beginning, when the boy is running away, he is shown throwing his knotted rope over the railing, and immediately beginning the climb down. The next shot shows him continuing his climb, but now the rope is tied with a big knot on the railing, though he didn't stop to do that.
    • Quotes

      Mike Andrews: Your daughter, may I remind you, speaks French. She's getting them in and out of these towns like the Scarlet Pimpernel.

    • Connections
      Referenced in What's My Line?: Gene Kelly (1957)
    • Soundtracks
      The Happy Road
      Music by Georges Van Parys

      Lyrics by Gene Kelly

      Performed by Maurice Chevalier

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 3, 1957 (Japan)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
      • Italian
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Happy Journey
    • Filming locations
      • Semur-en-Auxois, Côte-d'Or, France(children swap clothes, take boat)
    • Production company
      • Kerry
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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