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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Mrs. Harris goes to Paris is caught between its fantasies and its principles

Directed by Anthony Fabian, the film trades in a similar kind of British cosiness as the Paddington movies, though it’s not as zany or funny

Beatrice Loayza Published 05.11.22, 04:21 AM

In Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris, Lesley Manville returns to the world of high fashion in a reversal of her Oscar-nominated role in Phantom Thread. Her deliciously frigid character in that film — the forbidding manager of a British fashion house and foe to Vicky Krieps’s lowborn muse — would go catatonic were Manville’s Mrs Ada Harris to waltz into the fitting room, asking for a “frock” with her cockney drawl.

Unsurprisingly, the formidable Manville pulls off the switcheroo, instilling her role as the genial cleaning lady with a tenderness and grace that far surpasses the feel-good pish-posh that is the film around her.

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Directed by Anthony Fabian, Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris trades in a similar kind of British cosiness as the Paddington movies, though it’s not as zany or funny.

Mrs Harris, a widow toiling away in the service of the postwar London elite, has her eyes set on a custom Dior gown and, after a series of fortunate events, heads to Paris to retrieve the garment of her dreams. Despite having found the cash, our heroine must contend with the menacing Madame Colbert (Isabelle Huppert) and the snooty mores of the biz and its patrons.

For the other world-weary employees — the kindly, philosophising model Natasha (Alba Baptista), the lovesick accountant André (Lucas Bravo) — Mrs. Harris proves single-handedly that the rules of society aren’t necessarily ironclad. If a humble maid can get her hands on a dress that costs 600 pounds, what’s stopping Natasha from pursuing an intellectual life, or Andre from revolutionising the company to appeal to women from all walks of life?

The trope of the laughably frumpy worker bee, filled with optimism and quiet wisdom, is demeaning, and Mrs Harris’s iteration is no exception. Despite its gleeful showcasing of beautiful clothes and vibrant midcentury Parisian sights, the film is caught between its fantasies and its principles, landing somewhere more annoyingly clueless — and dull — than it ought to be.

The New York Times News Service

Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris (U)

Director: Anthony Fabiani

Cast: Lesley Manville, Isabelle Huppert, Lambert Wilson, Alba Baptista, Lucas Bravo, Ellen Thomas, Rose Williams, Jason Isaacs

Running time: 115 minutes

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