Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

      • "Monte Carlo" is a harmless, innocuous tween fantasy that seems constructed out of bits and pieces of movies that we must surely have seen before, but can't quite place because there's nothing much to remember. It's chirpy, it's bright, there are pretty locations and lots happens.
      www.rogerebert.com/reviews/monte-carlo-2011
  1. People also ask

  2. The Monte Carlo Story 1957 1h 39m Comedy Drama List Reviews 29% Audience Score Fewer than 50 Ratings When Maria (Marlene Dietrich) meets Count Dino (Vittorio De Sica) gambling in...

    • Movie Reviews

      Top Critics. All Audience. Verified Audience. Dennis...

  3. The Monte Carlo Story is a 1956 romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Samuel A. Taylor, based on an original story by Taylor, Marcello Girosi, and Dino Risi. Marcello Girosi produced the film, which was the first shot in the Technirama process. Jean Louis designed the costumes.

  4. Soon, a rich American (Arthur O'Connell) and his young daughter (Natalie Trundy) arrive in Monte Carlo and Dietrich and De Sica decide to try to woo both of them, as a marriage to either of them could end their money troubles.

  5. Top Critics. All Audience. Verified Audience. Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews. The stars give the romantic comedy some charm. Full Review | Original Score: B- | Oct 16, 2016....

  6. The Montecarlo Story: Directed by Samuel A. Taylor. With Marlene Dietrich, Vittorio De Sica, Arthur O'Connell, Jane Rose. A deeply-in-debt gambler sets his cap for a beautiful woman, not knowing that she is also penniless.

    • (442)
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
    • Samuel A. Taylor
    • 1957-10-09
  7. Jun 28, 2011 · Monte Carlo is an overbuilt condo tax shelter with bargain-basement royalty. Its sights, in this film, anyway, seem to consist mostly of hotel rooms. The adventures of the girls have less to do with traveling in Europe than with conspicuous consumption.

  8. Review by Craig Butler. The scenery challenges the star power in Monte Carlo Story, which is actually a good thing: viewers need as much to capture their attention as they can get, else they'll be forced to pay attention to the story of Monte Carlo, and that would simply never do.

  1. People also search for