Come Dance with Me!

December. 30,1959      
Rating:
6.2
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Herve argues with his wife, after which he meets an appealing woman at a nightclub. A subsequent one-night stand with her turns into a tragedy when the woman is killed.

Brigitte Bardot as  Virginie Dandieu
Henri Vidal as  Hervé Dandieu
Dawn Addams as  Anita Florès
Darío Moreno as  Florès
Noël Roquevert as  Albert Decauville-Lachenée
Maria Pacôme as  Mme Decauville-Lachenée
Philippe Nicaud as  Daniel, professeur de danse
Paul Frankeur as  le commissaire Marchal
Serge Gainsbourg as  Léon, le photographe, associé d'Anita
Joyce Johnson as  Daisy

Reviews

Raetsonwe
1959/12/30

Redundant and unnecessary.

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Actuakers
1959/12/31

One of my all time favorites.

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HeadlinesExotic
1960/01/01

Boring

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Bluebell Alcock
1960/01/02

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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MartinHafer
1960/01/03

This film begins with Brigitte Bardot falling in love with a dentist (Henri Vidal) and they soon marry. Soon after, he is seduced by a lady and goes back to her apartment. He begins to undress her and stops himself--he can't allow himself to cheat on his bride. He immediately leaves--not knowing that she is a blackmailer and her lover was photographing them in some very compromising positions. This begs the audience to wonder if any man can be THAT stupid and self-destructive, as at the time, Bardot was probably the most beautiful woman in the world (and, yes, I know there ARE men who cheat on their loving wives all the time--even if it makes no sense). Soon, the lady blackmailer shows up at the Dentist's office and demands money for the photos. A sane man would come clean to his wife right there and then, but this would also make for a VERY short film, so he agrees to meet her later at her dance studio. The poor husband plans on killing the woman but before he can, she's already dead--apparently she has created a lot of enemies! Brigitte arrives soon after him, as she'd overheard the two talking earlier and wondered what was happening between them. Both Bardot and her hubby flee to avoid the police.Bardot believes her husband when he tells her what happened. However, someone saw him at the studio and the police have a good description of him. So, to save her dumb husband, Brigitte decides to go undercover--and goes to the dance studio to ask for a job. Perhaps someone there knows what happened or was responsible for the killing. And, as this is only about thirty minutes into the film, you can safely assume that SOMETHING will occur sooner or later! This part of the film seemed well-suited for Bardot, as she was an exceptional dancer in real life. Where the film goes next is pleasant but there aren't too many surprises. Plus, while I like Bardot, this film seemed only okay--nothing special but also not bad in any particular way. The writing is decent, the acting just fine but apart from the role played by a gay transvestite, the rest of the film just seemed ordinary. Non-Bardot fans can skip this one--it's just among her best.By the way, like many French films of the era, this one if pretty frank about sex and sexuality. You will see some nudity it's obviously quite different from the sort of fare coming out of Hollywood at the same time!

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bonfirexx
1960/01/04

Brigitte Bardot was so completely feminine, playful, beautiful, and witty, she couldn't miss connecting with the male sector of any movie-going audience. And the women must have hated her, or at least envied her to tears.Bardot's face is so luminous, focusing upon it is more stimulating than seeing close-up, revealing body shots of her contemporaries such as Eckberg and Lollobrigida. She could take a mediocre, or in this case, convoluted plot, and save a film which would have been a dud with just about any other female star.The film is fast-paced, and suspenseful, in so far as the futility of trying to guess the culprit's identity, prior to the odds and ends being tied up neatly, in the end. And it far surpasses Bardot's collaboration with director Michel Boisrond, in "Mme. Pigalle," produced three years earlier. That one is filled with artifice and "mannerisms." such as fake auto rides, background landscape fakery, lip-synch singing, fake piano playing, and the stereotypical bumbling, "moronic cops" syndrome, so prevalent in films of the time. This film contains no artifice, or editing "tricks," whatsoever, and while it lacks for substance, it is entertaining, and the Bardot charisma at this most appealing stage of her life, stays with one, long after the curtain rings down.Henri Vidal, in his final role before his untimely death at age 40, is well-cast, as Bardot's husband who is being blackmailed by femme fatale Dawn Addams, herself a red-headed stunner who exits the film much too soon to suit the male voyeur contingent.********

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dbdumonteil
1960/01/05

"Voulez-vous danser avec moi" is really weird:it's not a comedy,but it looks like one sometimes,it's not a thriller ,but it looks like one sometimes.It includes murder,blackmail,transvestites ,a dancing school,an old "gothic" house,a dentist's office and a gay club ("le fétiche bleu"!!).PLus BB.The French Catholic Office of Cinema :thumbs down!I quote them: "showing such a tragedy as male homosexuality in a movie made for entertainment is intolerable!To avoid." But gays watching this movie have also good reasons to be infuriated .I'm not so sure that the 1960 audience leaving the theater did not heave a sigh of relief: " Those people are not like us.Look what they did here!"(remember what happened with "silence of the lambs" and " basic instinct") That said,the screenplay was written with care,BB acts naturally and she is a feast for the eye.She is given good support by Henri Vidal,the most handsome man of the era,singer Dario Moreno,Philippe Nicaud as a drag artist-singing Edith Piaf's "Mon Manège à Moi" - Georges Descrière and Maria Pacôme.

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gridoon
1960/01/06

"Come Dance With Me" was probably meant as an airy mystery-comedy, but it's mostly stage-bound and talky. What's more, I guessed who the killer was (though admittedly not his motive) 15 minutes into the film, and if you've ever read even one Agatha Christie story before, you'll have no problem guessing it, either. This being a French film, it is slightly more sexually explicit than most American films of the period: we see a woman's (no, not Bardot's) bare nipple, and (heavy SPOILERS follow) the killer turns out to be a transvestite. Bardot's "amateur detective" role is somewhat of an acting stretch for her (her character has more functions than simply looking pretty and teasing men), but I still feel that for many viewers her scenes in a revealing black dress will be the most memorable ones. (**1/2)

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