WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Comedy >

Paradise for Three

Watch Paradise for Three For Free

Paradise for Three

A businessman mingles with German laborers to learn more about their lives.

... more
Release : 1938
Rating : 7
Studio : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Assistant Art Director, 
Cast : Robert Young Frank Morgan Mary Astor Florence Rice Edna May Oliver
Genre : Comedy Romance

Cast List

Related Movies

City Slickers
City Slickers

City Slickers   1991

Release Date: 
1991

Rating: 6.8

genres: 
Comedy  /  Western
Stars: 
Billy Crystal  /  Daniel Stern  /  Bruno Kirby
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein

Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein   1948

Release Date: 
1948

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Horror  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Bud Abbott  /  Lou Costello  /  Lon Chaney Jr.
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer

I Still Know What You Did Last Summer   1998

Release Date: 
1998

Rating: 4.7

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller  /  Mystery
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner   1967

Release Date: 
1967

Rating: 7.8

genres: 
Drama  /  Romance
Alien Abduction
Alien Abduction

Alien Abduction   2014

Release Date: 
2014

Rating: 4.9

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Katherine Sigismund  /  Corey Eid  /  Jillian Clare
Breakdown
Breakdown

Breakdown   1997

Release Date: 
1997

Rating: 7

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Kurt Russell  /  J.T. Walsh  /  Kathleen Quinlan
Rebecca
Rebecca

Rebecca   1940

Release Date: 
1940

Rating: 8.1

genres: 
Thriller  /  Mystery  /  Romance
Stars: 
Laurence Olivier  /  Joan Fontaine  /  George Sanders
The Three Investigators and The Secret Of Skeleton Island
The Three Investigators and The Secret Of Skeleton Island

The Three Investigators and The Secret Of Skeleton Island   2008

Release Date: 
2008

Rating: 5.7

genres: 
Adventure  /  Mystery  /  Family
Stars: 
Nick Price  /  Cameron Monaghan  /  Nigel Whitmey
Lisa and the Devil
Lisa and the Devil

Lisa and the Devil   1976

Release Date: 
1976

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Horror
Stars: 
Telly Savalas  /  Elke Sommer  /  Sylva Koscina
Six Days Seven Nights
Six Days Seven Nights

Six Days Seven Nights   1998

Release Date: 
1998

Rating: 5.9

genres: 
Adventure  /  Action  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Anne Heche  /  Harrison Ford  /  David Schwimmer
He's Out There
He's Out There

He's Out There   2018

Release Date: 
2018

Rating: 5.3

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Westworld
Westworld

Westworld   1973

Release Date: 
1973

Rating: 6.9

genres: 
Adventure  /  Western  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Yul Brynner  /  Richard Benjamin  /  James Brolin

Reviews

MamaGravity
2018/08/30

good back-story, and good acting

More
Sexyloutak
2018/08/30

Absolutely the worst movie.

More
Afouotos
2018/08/30

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

More
Caryl
2018/08/30

It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties. It's a feast for the eyes. But what really makes this dramedy work is the acting.

More
mark.waltz
2016/02/10

This wacky screwball comedy has so much going on that you might have to watch it over again to make sure that you saw right. If Hellzappoppin' turned Broadway with all of its hysterical gags, this farce had Hollywood on its ears with laughter. Robert Young and Frank Morgan are mistaken for multi-millionaire and hobo respectively when they each check in to an inn in the Alps and practically cause an avalanche.Young encounters Morgan's daughter, Florence Rice, with Edna May Oliver garnering most of the laughs in her own uninhibited manner, even going down an Alp mountainside on skies and being accused of immoral behavior as age tries to track down long time employer Morgan. Mary Astor is a delight as an obvious gold digger, with smaller roles played by Reginald Owen, Felix Bressart and Herman Bing, the later in his funniest role as the hotel clerk whose attempts at keeping order keeps exploding in his face.The skiing and skating sequences appear to be black and white animation, but the lavish sets and costumes are only matched by the witty script. This isn't among the classic screwball comedies of the golden age, but as typical fluff, it is indeed fluff with plenty of innuendo and hysterically funny moments. Even an incident involving steam escaping results in plenty of giggles. Young and Rice are a charming couple, but it is the supporting characters, particularly Oliver, who end up as the scene stealers.

More
blanche-2
2015/06/28

Set in the absolute seat of anti-Semitism and after Austria was annexed by Germany comes this little light comedy, "Paradise for Three" starring Robert Young, Frank Morgan, Mary Astor, Edna May Oliver, Henry Hull, Reginald Owen, and Florence Rice.Many, many classic films are set in European locations, even though for years, they were done on Hollywood sets for the most part. Was it because of the European market? To give the films an exotic feel? Even if the film were adapted from a foreign book, a studio could still set it in the U.S. But no, it was always Switzerland, Austria, Germany, France, etc.Why would anyone set a film in Vienna in 1938? No idea, except that Hollywood (and I guess the U.S.) ignored what was going on in Europe for several years. Even when it was acknowledged, studios were careful in their films not to state that people were Jewish (in the Mortal Storm they were non-Aryans) or talk about the Nazis (in the Mortal Storm they showed swastikas but never used the word Nazi), at least at first.Robert Young is Fritz Hagedorn, a constant contest winner (26 in all) who wins the Tobler Soap motto competition. In second place, unknown to anyone, is the big guy himself, Rudolph Tobler (Frank Morgan). The prize for both is a ski vacation in the Alps, which Tobler takes under an assumed name and brings his butler (Owen) along as an associate.The hotel is ready to lay out the red carpet for Tobler because his housekeeper (Oliver) has called to say the contest winner is a wealthy gentleman is arriving and has to have the best of everything. She has to hang up before she can give his fake name, so when Fritz arrives, he gets a suite and all the perks. When Tobler arrives, they take him for a bum and throw him up in a freezing cold attic room.Believing Fritz to be the rich one, Mary Astor sets her eyes on him and makes a play. While in the hotel room with Fritz and Tobler, Fritz opens some brandy. When Tobler tastes it and identifies it by name, as a very expensive brandy, she realizes she's got the wrong guy. So she changes lanes.Fritz meanwhile is falling for Tobler's daughter (Rice). She tells him that she's poor, knowing he doesn't want to marry out of his class.Very funny film with some wonderful character acting from the hotel people (Hull, Herman Bing, Sig Ruman), a great dishwashing scene, Tobler being introduced to the features of his hotel room (broken window in the middle of window, ice in the sink, rock hard mattress), and Edna May Oliver skiing. By the way, she was 55 at the time of this filming and died at 59.The acting from the rest of the cast is delightful. I guess Hollywood least of anywhere cared what was going on in the rest of the world. Just put in a few yodelers, show some mountains, and that's it.

More
JohnLeeT
2014/03/13

A somewhat fascinating film when considered purely as an artifact of the times in which it was produced. While the story reflects the background of the Great Depression and it is clearly evident in the plight of the character portrayed by Robert Young, it is the black storm clouds of the coming war that cast their shadow across this motion picture. Based on a German novel that is harmless enough to have escaped the flames of a Hitlerian bonfire, the setting is Vienna, 1938. The fluff that is the plot plays out in a city facing its utter doom as Hitler is fated to soon shatter forever the loveliness of the cultural mecca. The delusional will hysterically welcome the evil seducer into their midst and crush the illusion this motion picture projected on thousand of screens. It is the beat of storm troopers' boots that echo in the background, overwhelming the soundtrack as the cast frolics in the Alpine snow soon to run red with the blood of Nazi victims. It is as if monstrous hordes of black helmeted ski troops line the peaks of the slopes, waiting to sweep savagely down upon hapless Hollywood stars. The characters seem oblivious to what is to come but their future is inescapably intertwined with the geo-political environment in which they are trapped. This film stands as a curious moment in time, a snapshot of people dancing on the precipice of the abyss. The Europe in which they exist will soon be no more and they will be engulfed in the wave of unrelenting violence and horror that will break upon them within months. The creative minds behind the production can not ignore the headlines and that shadow of fear fleets across the shallow smiles of the actors. The theatre audiences that watched this film were well aware of what was happening and perhaps had just seen a newsreel of goosestepping SS parading before the swastika draped maniac who would soon touch all their lives with his frigid fingers. It is this background that is the foundation of this production and our hindsight cuts deeply into the way we view this film. The audience of the era sat uneasily in their seats, conscious of the horror awaiting them but in determined denial regarding the future. The audience of today can see that future and watches powerlessly, looking at the images that are now tainted by the dark knowledge of historical perspective. The broad grins that illuminate the opening credits seem forced now and strange in the harsh light of reality. But what indeed is reality once time and history have had their way with it? The images in this movie are the present and what we see is what was as well as what will be. It is in this context that the true value of the film can be discovered and considered.

More
Neil Doyle
2012/05/17

MGM certainly used a low budget to make PARADISE FOR THREE, and it shows when it comes to the outdoor winter scenes supposedly taking place on ski slopes at an Alpine resort. The use of process photography for all those mountain tops covered with snow is obvious.Nor did they use a top cast but the results are splendid nevertheless.An up and coming Robert Young has the star role of a contest winner who is mistakenly thought to be a millionaire by Herman Bing and Sig Rumann when he arrives at his destination at a swank hotel. He immediately attracts the attention of Mary Astor, hard on her luck as far as money is concerned and looking for an easy catch.But the fun begins when Frank Morgan decides to check on how the hotel treats the lower class and finds himself mistaken for a mere contest winner without money. The pretty blond Florence Rice plays his daughter who naturally falls in love with penniless Robert Young, who doesn't know she's a rich girl until the final reel.It's predictable and silly, with great support from Edna May Oliver as Morgan's housekeeper of thirty years who joins the group at the hotel to look out for Morgan's health and keeps an eye on his "woman trouble" with Astor. She makes the most of an amusing role in true Edna May Oliver fashion.This is one that's little known today. To put it in context, it probably played the lower half of bills in the "double feature" days which is why I call it a programmer. I wouldn't be surprised if it's one of those B-films that surprised audiences by being more entertaining than the main feature, which happened occasionally.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now