Travels with My Aunt
Travels with My Aunt
PG | 17 December 1972 (USA)
Travels with My Aunt Trailers

At his mother's funeral, stuffy bank clerk Henry Pulling meets his Aunt Augusta, an elderly eccentric with more-than-shady dealings who pulls him along on a whirlwind adventure as she attempts to rescue an old lover.

Reviews
mark.waltz

The amazing Dame Maggie Smith has had many great roles in her career, and on film she has played a variety of characters, from the corruptible Miss Jean Brodie, the acerbic but fun loving Dora Charles in "Murder by Death", the rigid cousin Charlotte in "A Room with a View, and currently the role which introduced her to millions who otherwise may not have known her, the Lady Grantham on BBC's "Downton Abbey". In "Travels With my Aunt" she is a 70 year old eccentric woman who mysteriously appears at a strange woman's funeral, and claims to be her sister, thus adopting her suppose it nephew home she engages in a series of wacky adventures. Along the way, he finds himself learning more about life and he could ever hope to imagine while she flashes back to the truth of her real past which isn't a life to be quietly dismissed.The alleged nephew is Alec McGowan, a rather square peg who is easily manipulated by her lust for life and is easily taken for a literal ride BT her. Along the way she introduces him to drifter Cindy Williams and her black companion, Louis Gossett Jr. She tells him of her many affairs which the audience gets to see through some magnificently filmed flashbacks. In period costume, she is absolutely ravishing and while in a scene depicting her as a teenager, she does not appear to be under 30. I actually thought she resembled Vanessa Redgrave in those scenes. The 20's period costumes fit her very well, clad in outfits that her TV granddaughters would definitely be wearing.As the truth about her erupts, the real motivations are exposed and it isn't what you think. This is definitely not a rip-off of "Auntie Mame" which some reviewers have suggested although the moral of live life to the fullest and give yourself to others to make their lives a little better is loud and clear.The film was to be a reunion for director George Cukor and Katharine Hepburn, but that did work our. Hepburn's original casting may give way to the fact that the costumes look very Hepburn in style. The current career of Dame Maggie is very comparable to Hepburn's later career which is why some people, myself included, consider Dame Maggie a modern day British version of Hepburn.The film is certainly very theatrical and an artistic way of looking at life that pragmatic people may frown upon. So this may not appeal to the sensible, the non-dreamers, the dreary. Stay behind then and leave thus voyage to us. I'll take this aunt any day. She knows where the banquet is.

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edwagreen

The always wonderful Maggie Smith shines here as still another eccentric. Ms. Smith seemed to make a career of portraying eccentric characters and in "Travels With My Aunt," she falls right into appropriate form.Meeting her alleged nephew at her sister's funeral, she immediately goes on a madcap adventure with him to secure funds so she can pay the ransom for her hostage-held lover.We immediately know that the woman he called mother is not his and can guess automatically who his real parents are.Smith opens a new life for her nephew while we see the rather poor choices she made throughout her life in the men she loved.With that Maggie Smith strut across the screen, she depicted a memorable character but the film suffers because it becomes silly at times.The up-in-the-air ending is most appropriate since we really don't know how life shall turn out for us.

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Clothes-Off

This is one of those filmed novels--like "The Prince of Tides", "The Object of My Affection", or "THe Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy"--which readers of the book will find disappointing. I'm guessing, however, that most people who discover it now will not have read the book. And as a stand-alone film, how could you not like it? Maggie Smith is hilarious; and now that she IS the age of the character she was playing at the time, it makes her broad performance even more amazing. (There are hints of this character in the role she played 29 years later in "Gosford Park".)The real gift for first-time viewers will be discovering Alec McCowen's wonderful acting as the stiff, stodgy nephew. He's one of those actors you see once, and then immediately you'll want to find out what else he's done. Lou Gossett Jr, and Cindy WIlliams are also enjoyable in early career roles. This film was made in an era where greats like George Cukor were getting in a few last licks out of lengthy, distinguished career. (William Wyler and Joseph L. Mankiewicz were also showing they still had greatness in them during this period.) The film's score deserves mention, as it teleported me back to 1972, where I could imagine myself seeing this in a theatre wearing bell-bottoms and sporting a shag haircut (like WIlliams' in the movie). The theme song, "Serenade of Love", should have been nominated for an Oscar.So again, if I'd read the book--which I now plan to do--I might feel differently; but compared to much of today's dreck, this is a whole lot of fun. From the moment that portrait winked at me at the beginning, I enjoyed it.

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dglink

Dull stuffy bachelor meets flamboyant eccentric aunt, who seeks to show him the world's pleasures. Sound familiar? While based on a Graham Greene novel, "Travels with My Aunt" plays on screen like a subdued version of "Auntie Mame." Unlike the rowdy broadness of the Patrick Dennis play and the Rosalind Russell film, George Cukor's adaptation of the Greene work tries to be high-toned and literary, while simultaneously striving to seem madcap and funny. Unfortunately, the film succeeds more in its pretentiousness than it does in its comedy.Alec McCowen is fine as Henry Pulling, the bank clerk who fusses with dahlias in his spare time and fumes prissily when cannabis is mixed with the ashes of his mother. Henry is a prime candidate for an Auntie Mame, although he's a bit beyond his formative years. Henry's out-of-character dalliance aboard the Orient Express with Cindy Williams, as a young drifter on her way to Katmandu, should have been cut. The tryst adds nothing to the plot and only confuses perceptions about Henry. Maggie Smith, at times stunningly garbed in luscious gowns by Anthony Powell, plays Aunt Augusta for all she's worth, and Maggie is certainly worth a great deal. Although the actress is clearly too old to play the younger Augusta and too young, even with the age makeup, to play the elder woman, Smith is always fascinating to watch. Despite her mannerisms, which at times overwhelm the characterization, Smith is generally convincing and should have taken a shot at playing Mame Dennis in either the comedy or the musical version of "Auntie Mame." Although "Travels with My Aunt" was beautifully filmed by Douglas Slocombe against scenic splendor that stretches from Istanbul to Venice to Spain, the pace is often sluggish, and the plot preposterous. The proceedings are propelled by Augusta's need to raise the ransom money to rescue a former lover, whose minor appendages are being sent to her one by one as a warning. However, coincidences abound, plot holes deepen, and threads are left hanging all over. Without McCowen and Smith, the film would be little more than a stylish, if soporific, travelogue.

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