Paris (1929 film)
1929 film / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Paris is a 1929 American pre-Code musical comedy film, featuring Irène Bordoni. It was filmed with Technicolor sequences: four of the film's ten reels were originally photographed in Technicolor.
Paris | |
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Directed by | Clarence G. Badger |
Written by | Martin Brown E. Ray Goetz Hope Loring (titles) |
Based on | Paris by Martin Brown |
Produced by | Robert North |
Starring | Irène Bordoni Jack Buchanan Louise Closser Hale Jason Robards Sr. ZaSu Pitts |
Cinematography | Sol Polito |
Edited by | Edward Schroeder |
Music by | Cole Porter Edward Ward |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. |
Release date |
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Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $431,000[1] |
Box office | $1,173,000[1] |
Paris was the fourth color film released by Warner Bros.; the first three were The Desert Song (although it was only a part-color film), On with the Show, and Gold Diggers of Broadway, all released in 1929. (Song of the West was actually completed by June 1929 but had its release delayed until March 1930). The film was adapted from the Cole Porter Broadway musical of the same name. The musical was Porter's first Broadway hit. Only fragment film elements of Paris are known to exist, although the complete soundtrack survives on Vitaphone disks. The sound tape reels for this film survive at UCLA Film and Television Archive.
Paris was the fourth film Warner Brothers made with their Technicolor contract. The filmmakers used a color (Technicolor) process of red and green, at the time it was the third process of Technicolor.[2][3][4]