Contest Girl (1964)
5/10
over long and mostly dull
26 November 2007
When I was young I had a "Picture-Goers Annual of 1953" - in it there was an article about Janette Scott. No description was too good for this young star who had made such a splash a few years before in "No Place for Jennifer". Big things were expected of her.

She had a reasonable career - appearing as Susie Dean in the remake of "The Good Companions" (a role that was forever associated with Jessie Matthews) was not a good career move.

"The Beauty Jungle" was one of her last films - an expose of beauty pageants. Shirley Freeman is on holiday when she is spotted by a model agent (Ian Hendry). He convinces her to enter a "prettiest girl in the cinema" competition and she wins 5 pounds.

She goes back to her humdrum life but she misses the applause and recognition so she decides to pursue a beauty pageant career. After dyeing her hair blonde (which makes her look cheap - her natural brunette hair suited her better and made her look younger but not so glamorous) she wins a chance to compete in the Rose of England Beauty Pageant.

Edmond Purdon, looking even younger than he did in "The Student Prince" plays a matinée idol who turns Shirley's head in Monte Carlo.

Considering that parts of the film were shot on location in Monte Carlo, there was no advantage taken of the scenery. Most of the scenes were indoors.

Stirling Moss and Norman Hartnell (the Queen's dress designer) appeared in cameos as themselves, the gowns were by Christian Dior - it was a film in which no expense was spared.

The end result, though, was a very over-long and mostly dull film which at nearly 2 hours could have done with some heavy editing.
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