No Minor Vices (1948) Poster

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5/10
Living for art
Prismark107 January 2017
This is a curious existentialist comedy with a touch of Preston Sturges about it.

Dana Andrews plays a medic who dabbles as a psychologist who puts marital bliss with his wife Lilli Palmer in jeopardy when he meets a European artist and musician (Louis Jourdan) who brings chaos to their lives with his easy charm and talent as he reveals their hidden selves.

Andrews has taken things for granted, his wife does everything for him, his secretary is in love with him and his medical assistant wants to be him.

It is a frivolous even an erudite comedy but the story is too light and despite a very good and different performance from Jourdan, Andrews always looks uncomfortable with the material.
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7/10
There are no minor vices.
morrison-dylan-fan5 February 2017
Warning: Spoilers
After being very happy about the BBC showing rather obscure films over the weekends of 2016,I was disappointed to find 2017 kicking off with much more recent flicks being shown. Taking a look on BBC iPlayer,I was pleased to find that things appeared to be back on track with an obscure Dana Andrews title,which led to me indulging in some vices.

The plot:

Finding his dinner and newspaper to always be ready for him when he returns from work, Perry Ashwell feels blissful in the knowledge that his wife April will always be a good little housewife. Flirting with all the women at work,Perry decides that he can show off the perfect life he has. Wanting a physical image of their (his) perfect life,Perry hires artist Octavio Quaglini to paint his wife,who soon brushes against the flaking paint of the Ashwell's marriage.

View on the film:

Slithering round the Ashwell's marriage, Louis Jourdan gives a deliciously snappy performance as Quaglini,whose every acid exchange with Perry and sly nod to April are tightly coiled by Jourdan with eyes on the long game Quaglini is playing. Putting some of his own cash down on the project, (which did not get returned) Dana Andrews gives a wonderfully pompous performance as Perry,who Andrews hilariously keeps on a narrow path that blinds him from seeing Quaglini crossover into his life. Painted in-between the guys,the cute Lilli Palmer gives a sparkling performance as April,as April goes from silently following orders,to hitting the guys with sparks of sass.

Made to save the studio from going bust after Arch of Triumph bombed, director Lewis Milestone & cinematographer George Barnes keep the money issues off screen with a zestful Screwball Comedy atmosphere, bouncing from physical comedy exchanges between the guys,and an elegant use of shadows to give Quaqlini a sinister shine. Ordered by the studios to keep it simple,the screenplay by Arnold Manoff does very well at ruffling up the arrogance of Perry,with Manoff finding very funny set-pieces in Perry's high and mighty attitude. Hissing into their lives,Manoff makes Quaqlini's arrival one that sets off a Screwball Comedy storm lighting the deep rooted flaws in the marriage,as the Ashwell's discover their minor vices.
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5/10
A strange interlude
bkoganbing21 May 2015
A whole lot like Preston Sturges's Unfaithfully Your's with a technique originated in Eugene O'Neill's Strange Interlude, No Minor Vices is the story of the marital crisis of Dana Andrews and Lilli Palmer brought on by the disturbing presence of artist Louis Jourdan. Of course it doesn't come near being as good as either of the other two works.

The biggest problem that No Minor Vices has is the casting of Dana Andrews in the lead. I don't think that it's an accident that Dana Andrews never did another comic lead again in his film career. The man was just not blessed with the light touch of comedy in his player's persona. The film needed someone like Fred MacMurray or Ray Milland in the part of the jealous husband.

Andrews is a rather smug and self satisfied child psychologist who dispenses advise on everybody's problems asked or not. He thinks that married life is just perfect with a wife who does his bidding at his whim. That is until another guy who is rather full of himself, artist Louis Jourdan enters his life. Jourdan has nothing but time on his hands as his bills are paid by his mother. Charm can come easy when you don't have to worry about bills.

The film could also have used an Ernest Lubitsch or a Mitchell Leisen as well. Lewis Milestone who peaked early in his career with his Oscar for All Quiet On The Western Front is also not a director for classic comedy. Even Billy Wilder would have gotten so much more out of this film.

Not in the best work of Dana Andrews though Louis Jourdan has a few moments I suspect interpolated in the film on his own.
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always remembered with a sigh
raineybug12 July 2003
I saw this movie as a little girl and fell in love forever with Louis Jourdan. I have just fleeting memories of it, but remember he was so charming and handsome and adorable. I saw Him in a play as a young teen and never really got over it.

Being so young my moral compass was not fully developed and i simply couldn't believe Lili Palmer wouldn't just take his hand and never look back...Would love to see it again.
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3/10
Nope.
planktonrules15 September 2023
The fact that I disliked so much of "No Minor Vices" says a lot, as Dana Andrews is one of my favorite actors. But good actor or not, the plot to this film is pure nonsense...and I don't mean that in a good way.

Perry (Dana Andrews) is a very successful child psychologist who seems to always know how to cut through to the roots of the problem with his patients. He's really good...and dreadfully aware of this. However, when he meets a kooky guy, Octavio (Louis Jourdan) he's finally met his match. Octavio is not mentally ill so much as a manipulator...and soon he's manipulated himself into the life of both Perry and Perry's wife, April (Lili Palmer). All sorts of silliness ensues...or at least is supposed to ensue.

The first 15 minutes or so of the film is quite good...and most enjoyable. But when Octavio is introduced, the story becomes muddled and dumb. It just doesn't make sense but most importantly, it's not funny...and this is supposed to be a comedy. A huge misfire...though the actors try their best.

If you do watch the film, watch for a really bratty kid at the beginning. That's seven year-old Beau Bridges in his first film.
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5/10
No Major Movie
boblipton21 September 2023
Calm child psychologist Dana Andrews encounters artist Louis Jourdan and suggest that he paint people at his office. Jourdan agrees and observes a staff devoted to him and likewise his wife, Lili Palmer' Andrews life is idyllic. Jourdan decides to seduce Miss Palmer.

It's not so much a movie as a stage play with occasional interludes of the characters thoughts recited aloud. The situations are amusing, but as Andrews' life and self-assurance crumble, and he comes to realize that Jourdan's observations are accurate, he grows increasingly frenzied. The performances are excellent, although always too well-mannered to be more than mannered observations in a three-set drama. With Jane Wyatt, Norman Lloyd, and Beau Bridges (age 7) in his screen debut.
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9/10
A humorous film about Life and Art .
Rifab8 October 2006
"No Minor Vices" is a gem. It uses wit and humor to comment on the conflict between Life and Art. The plot centers on a confrontation between the quintessential MD, who fancies himself a psychologist, and the quintessential Artist, who fancies himself a philosopher. While every dullard believes he may criticize Art, no one would ever suggest criticizing the validity of scientific judgment. The supercilious Artist (played to perfection by Louis Jordan) decides to teach a lesson about Art to the know-it-all MD (effectively played by Dana Andrews), using as tools: Love and the MD's wife (charmingly played by Lilli Palmer). In a series of funny episodes, each teaches the other understanding and respect. The Artist's satiric drawings, used to comment on the MD/and the Scientific, are wonderful and all too true to LIFE and to the Humor in the human condition. Ars longa vita brevis, Hippocrates said. Bravo Lewis Milestone for bringing the truth of this home to us with so much fun.
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10/10
This movie lives in my memory.
negevoli-4430 June 2000
I saw this charming comedy several times in the 1950s, when I was a little girl. I was absolutely enthralled with the suave and handsome Louis Jourdan, who is the personification of what a leading man should be. Lili Palmer, who looked exquisite, was his match. I was able to eat lobster after seeing this, but not as an adult.

This movie used to get me into trouble with my parents because I didn't have a TV in my room and would sneak out of bed at night occasionally when this movie was on, turn the sound down very low and sit on top of the screen in order to see and hear it. But I would still get caught. It wasn't the movie, it was the late hour that would get me into trouble.

I would really like to see this again to see if it still stands up. I know I have always been a Louis Jourdan fan because of it.
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ok but needs a Cary Grant
didi-519 August 2003
I did try to like this - and Lilli Palmer is excellent as the bored wife of gifted doctor Dana Andrews, doomed to a life of cooking lobsters and making do. The part of the doctor though seems to be beyond Andrews and needs a Cary Grant or a William Powell to give it some zip. And Louis Jourdan wouldn't float my boat, far too scheming and false, yuk. Watch out for little Beau Bridges in one of his early film roles. It's fun but with the right cast and a lighter touch than director Lewis Milestone had it could have been more than a minor curio.
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