Review of Roman Holiday


© David Macdonald
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One of the great romantic comedies is William Wyler's Roman Holiday (1953), starring Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck. The film is perfect in nearly every way, managing to be both bittersweet and charming at the same time.

Hepburn plays a princess on an official tour of Europe, and who makes a stop in Italy; Rome to be precise. As is customary, she presides over a gathering of dignitaries, and is introduced to each one in a very long list of individuals. After this, she must rest up for another very long day, with yet more meetings, appearances, and photo ops. But the princess is growing increasingly angry at this regulated, suffocating lifestyle (amusing dialogue about how she should wear what she wants in bed), and wishes to have some time for herself. So after the official gathering, she simply flips out, requiring her mistress to call the doctor for a tranquillizer. But before the drug kicks in, she is able to cleverly sneak out of the building, sneaking a ride in a produce truck. Now she is in Rome, with nowhere to go.

But somebody eventually does find her. It's Gregory Peck, playing a reporter stuck in a place without exciting news. He finds her on a park bench, in a state which he thinks is drunkenness, but which is actually the grogginess from the tranquillizer. He attempts to take her home, but she keeps mumbling that she is staying in the Coliseum, which can't be right. So, reluctantly, he takes her to his apartment to let her sleep on the couch. Little does he know that this will turn from a drunk sleeping on his couch to the biggest scoop of his life. He finds out her identity from his boss, who shows him her picture splashed across the front page of the local newspapers, with the headline that the princess is ill. It's that drunk woman sleeping on the couch! Peck keeps this fact to himself, but bets his boss that he can get an exclusive interview with the princess. The boss accepts, knowing there's an extra buck to be made for Peck's failure to follow through.

Peck must do everything to keep her in sight. This builds up to the main sequence, when, after having followed her through town, he meets up with her, pretending to have just been surprised at running into her again. In a mutual deception, Hepburn tells Peck that she has run away from school, while Peck tells her he is a salesman. The catch is that Peck already knows the

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