Bon Voyage!

C'est la vie... it's gay Paree!

5.5
19622h 10m

The Willards from Terre Haute, Indiana travels abroad for the once-in-a-lifetime vacation in Paris, France. Harry Willard believes that the greatest problem will be avoiding tap water, but bringing his three children will prove to be more troublesome

Production

Logo for Walt Disney Productions

Cast

Photo of Fred MacMurray

Fred MacMurray

Harry Willard

Photo of Jane Wyman

Jane Wyman

Katherine "Katie" Willard

Photo of Michael Callan

Michael Callan

Nick O'Mara

Photo of Deborah Walley

Deborah Walley

Amy Willard

Photo of Jessie Royce Landis

Jessie Royce Landis

Countessa 'La Comtesse' DuFresne

Photo of Tommy Kirk

Tommy Kirk

Elliott Willard

Photo of Georgette Anys

Georgette Anys

Madame Clebert

Photo of Kevin Corcoran

Kevin Corcoran

Skipper Willard

Photo of Ivan Desny

Ivan Desny

Rudolph Hunschak

Photo of Alex Gerry

Alex Gerry

Horace Bidwell

Photo of Howard Smith

Howard Smith

Judge Henderson

Photo of Max Showalter

Max Showalter

The Tight Suit

Photo of Doris Packer

Doris Packer

Mrs. Henderson

Photo of James Millhollin

James Millhollin

Ship's Librarian

Photo of Richard Wattis

Richard Wattis

Party Guest

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Reviews

R

r96sk

7/10

Just about stands up as a good film in my books.

'Bon Voyage!' is probably disappointing overall, but there's enough produced for it to be deemed marginally positively. The overcooked run time and overly seriously taken plot is what holds this back.

There's also a frustrating lack of adventure too, especially after the opening few scenes seem to indicate a fun journey is on the way around Europe - instead they just toddled about around France, whilst trying to force through heartwarming narratives which don't really come off.

The strongest part of this film is its cast, which is more than decent. Fred MacMurray is unsurprisingly the star as Harry, but Jane Wyman (Katie) and Tommy Kirk (Elliott) give performances which I mostly liked. Kevin Corcoran isn't annoying either, this is the type of role where what he brings to the table actually works well enough.

The film is shot very nicely across land and ocean, though it is mostly outdated in how it portrays some aspects. Still, a film worth a watch - just not one I'll be revisiting any time soon.

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