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So Long at the Fair
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So Long at the Fair is based on a true story -- or at least, a story that has been told and retold so often that it is now accepted as truth. The year is 1889: the setting, the Paris Exhibition. Among the thousands in attendance are Vicky Barton (Jean Simmons) and her brother Johnny (David Tomlinson). After the first night of the Exhibition, Vicky is exhilarated, while Johnny seems a bit under the weather. The next morning, Vicky knocks on Johnny's hotel door, only to discover that her brother has disappeared. When she goes to the police and, later, to the British consul, the authorities refuse to believe her story. In fact, there is no evidence that Johnny ever existed! The outcome of this story is rather well known; still, it is perhaps best not to reveal any further details. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Like the earlier The Lady Vanishes and the later Bunny Lake Is Missing, So Long at the Fair centers around a person who has disappeared and the efforts of a woman to convince the rest of the world that the person really existed. It's a wonderfully effective gimmick, thrusting (in Fair's case) Vicky Barton into a world in which her sanity is questioned and in which a strange form of psychological torment is enacted upon her. Fair doesn't take full advantage of this, and the screenplay as a whole is a trifle lacking; it's certainly serviceable and gets the job done, but it lacks those little leaps of imagination that could set it apart. The direction, by Anthony Darnborough and Terence Fisher, is better -- and quite good in places -- but it also could use a little more spark. Fortunately, Jean Simmons and Dirk Bogarde are on hand to take up the slack in that department, and they do a very fine job. Simmons grabs hold of all the opportunities that her role presents and runs with them; she's vulnerable, determined, exasperated, suspicious, maddened, tormented, and a complete joy. Bogarde has a bit less to work with, as is usually the case with this kind of role, but he does so much with what he's given that one would never notice any lack in the writing. The supporting actors are uniformly fine, with Cathleen Nesbitt deserving of special mention. If it has its flaws, So Long at the Fair is nonetheless greatly enjoyable. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
 

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