The Imaginary Voyage
1926 film
- Dolly Davis
- Jean Börlin
- Albert Préjean
- Jimmy Berliet
- Amédée Morrin
Production
company
company
Georges Loureau
Release date
- 30 April 1926 (1926-04-30)
Running time
- Silent
- French intertitles
The Imaginary Voyage (French: Le voyage imaginaire) is a 1926 French silent comedy film directed by René Clair and starring Dolly Davis, Jean Börlin and Albert Préjean.[1]
Plot
In a vivid daydream, a reserved bank clerk is guided by a fairy into an underground realm where ordinary people morph into animals and wax figures spring to life. Lucie, the woman he admires from work, joins him, but they encounter obstacles as a malevolent fairy endeavors to keep them separated.
Cast
- Dolly Davis as Lucie – a typist
- Jean Börlin as Jean
- Albert Préjean as Albert
- Jim Gérald as Auguste
- Paul Ollivier as the bank manager
- Maurice Schutz as La sorcière
- Yvonne Legeay as La mauvaise fée
- Marguerite Madys as Urgel - la bonne fée
- Marise Maia
- Bronja Perlmutter
- Jane Pierson
- Louis Pré Fils
References
- ^ Oscherwitz & Higgins p.355
Bibliography
- Dayna Oscherwitz & MaryEllen Higgins. The A to Z of French Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2009.
External links
- The Imaginary Voyage at IMDb
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Films directed by René Clair
- The Crazy Ray (1924)
- The Phantom of the Moulin Rouge (1925)
- The Imaginary Voyage (1926)
- The Prey of the Wind (1927)
- The Italian Straw Hat (1928)
- Two Timid Souls (1928)
- Under the Roofs of Paris (1930)
- Le Million (1931)
- À Nous la Liberté (1931)
- Bastille Day (1933)
- The Last Billionaire (1934)
- The Ghost Goes West (1935)
- Break the News (1938)
- The Flame of New Orleans (1941)
- I Married a Witch (1942)
- It Happened Tomorrow (1944)
- And Then There Were None (1945)
- Man About Town (1947)
- Beauty and the Devil (1950)
- Beauties of the Night (1952)
- The Grand Maneuver (1955)
- Gates of Paris (1957)
- All the Gold in the World (1961)
- The Lace Wars (1965)
Anthologies
- Entr'acte (1924)
- Forever and a Day (1943, segment "1897")
- Three Fables of Love (1962, segment "Les Deux Pigeons")
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