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The Millionairess
Overlook Pick

The Millionairess

53
User Score41 ratings
TMDB 5.316+19601h 29mEnglish
ComedyRomance

Synopsis

When her father dies, Epifania Parerga, an Italian in London, becomes the world's richest woman. She feels incomplete without a husband and falls in love with a humble, Indian physician, Ahmed el Kabir, much loved by his indigent English patients.

Director
Anthony AsquithFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Dimitri De Grunwald Production1 production companies
Release
October 18, 1960Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 22
Sophia Loren
Sophia Loren
Epifania Parerga
Peter Sellers
Peter Sellers
Dr. Kabir
Vittorio De Sica
Vittorio De Sica
Joe
Alastair Sim
Alastair Sim
Sagamore
Dennis Price
Dennis Price
Adrian
Gary Raymond
Gary Raymond
Alastair
Miriam Karlin
Miriam Karlin
Mrs. Joe
Noel Purcell
Noel Purcell
Professor Merton

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Feb 12, 2023

I always struggled with Peter Sellers' brand of humour and combined with an over-the-top effort from Sophia Loren here, I will admit to squirming just a bit too often for comfort. She is the eponymous millionairess who can only marry if she meets very strict conditions set by her late father - else she loses everything. She is, however, attracted to Sellers' Delhi-born, scholarly and frankly unlikely "Dr. Kabir" whom it's safe to say, doesn't quite meet the criteria. He promised his mother that he would only marry a woman of modest means who can live, without complaint, on a mere 35 shillings for three months and she must marry a man who can turn the sum of £500 into £15,000 in the same time period. Impossible? Give up? Yes please, but no - we must persevere as the increasingly contrived humour struggles along for another hour that is as devoid of charm as it is of sophistication. Sellers has no charisma here and though Loren tries hard and looks the part, there isn't really any chemistry on display as the story sort of lurches from one unlikely scenario to another. The supporting cast - Alastair Sim and Dennis Price amongst them, are rarely on screen long enough to elevate this from a rather colourful and quickly paced farce that I couldn't really engage with. Time hasn't been especially kind to it - but I am not sure it was really any good in the first place.

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