Return to Paradise (1953) Poster

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7/10
They Heal Each Other
bkoganbing15 September 2007
Return to Paradise's main problem is that Gary Cooper at 52 is way too old for the part of the hedonistic Mr. Morgan. The part should have been played by someone like Kirk Douglas, William Holden, or Burt Lancaster.

Having said that Coop does all right in the role of the man whose arrival on one of the islands of the Samoan archipelago changes all around him.

The story begins in the late twenties when Cooper is put ashore on an island that is ruled by a tyrannical missionary preacher, Barry Jones, who's got 'wardens' to make sure that his decrees about the island's morality is enforced. Instinctively he knows that Cooper's arrival means trouble for his social order and tries to order him off the island. He even has Cooper's fledgling grass hut torn down because he's working on the sabbath.

But Coop's independent ways spark the latent resistance growing in the population. His taking on the 'wardens' is all that's needed.

Cooper has also fallen in love with a young Samoan girl, the beautiful Roberta Haynes. When she dies in childbirth, he leaves and becomes a charter schooner captain. Years later he returns and has to face up to his responsibility as a father.

A lot of Return to Paradise is a test of wills between Cooper and Barry Jones and at first glance Jones's character almost seems a caricature of a fire and brimstone preacher. It's not by any means on several levels. In his later work Hawaii, author James Michener explores that whole angle of the American missionaries in the 19th century and their impact on that Polynesian culture.

As he says in the film, Jones's father was killed in a native uprising and his wife died in childbirth. It made him bitter at the world and resulted in his creating a Christian Taliban like state on the island.

But there's a lot more to Jones than that. It turns out that the natives really did want to hear the good parts of his gospel and did not slacken in church attendance. There's a scene in the film when he sees the natives coming into his church where instead of going to the pulpit, he sits in the congregation among the natives. It's more eloquent than ten pages of dialog.

Jones becomes a better man and a wiser preacher as a result of Cooper's rebellion. He turns out to be a wise counselor indeed, especially when Cooper returns to the island and faces a crisis about his now teenage daughter, Moira McDonald. Essentially Cooper and Jones heal each other of the flaws in their respective characters.

Return to Paradise boasted a nice title song that is heard throughout the film. Later on Bing Crosby also used it as the title track of an album he did of south sea music for Frank Sinatra's Reprise label. It was composed by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington who last year gave Cooper that unforgettable theme from High Noon.

Filmed entirely on location on Samoa, it's a stunningly beautiful film to watch. You can't make a bad film from with that location.

It's one of Gary Cooper's lesser known works, but it's not a bad film and holds up well after over 50 years.
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7/10
Remarkably Ahead of Its Time
nafps7 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
A film from the early 1950s which attacks prejudice and religious intolerance and celebrates indigenous culture, easygoing sexual morality, and interracial marriage. I'm reminded of King Solomon's Mines with Stewart Granger. Both these films did something remarkable for the time. They made their films with the local people instead of a Hollywood backlot, showing the local cultures on their own terms.

RTP was made in Samoa, using almost all Samoan actors. The one jarring note is the female lead is obviously a white woman in makeup. At one point she even shows off a pale leg while her face is tinted darker. Still, this German American actress did avoid acting in stereotypes and speaks Samoan, at least to my ears, not any different than the Samoan actors. Samoans might feel differently.

Gary Cooper fits this role well, a decent everyman that outsiders will identify with in his fight against the intolerant missionary and governor who uses force and Puritanical hostility to "turn the island into a prison" in one Samoan boy's words. Worth a look, and an interesting time capsule of a film.
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6/10
Enjoyable but highly uneven.
planktonrules28 January 2016
"Return to Paradise" is a very strange Gary Cooper movie. His character is an odd one indeed--very admirable and brave on one hand and a total jerk on the other. The overall film, as a result is entertaining but far from satisfying.

The film begins with Mr. Morgan (Cooper) arriving on a small Polynesian island. The place is sort of a theocracy run by a VERY puritanical man, the Reverend Corbett (Barry Jones). However, Corbett and his personal band of thugs are quick to enforce their laws...but seem to take delight in not informing Morgan of the laws first! After he is attacked by these bullies, Morgan stands up for himself...and earns the respect of the locals who are getting sick of Corbett's mistreatment. Ultimately, and reluctantly, Corbett's thugs are chased off and the islanders are happy...and Corbett changes and becomes less nasty and puritanical over time. What also happens is that Morgan's new woman, Maeva, becomes pregnant and eventually dies in childbirth. At this point, Morgan shows that although he seemed like a pretty cool guy through much of the film, now he is a jerk, as he leaves his new daughter with her grandmother and he leaves the island.

Nearly two decades pass and WWII has broken out. Morgan finally returns to the island and finds he's sort of a folk hero...and Corbett is still there but has mellowed considerably. He also finds his daughter and their relationship is clearly problematic. It becomes more problematic later after some American airmen are stranded on the island...and Morgan begins acting like an overbearing and protective father...which makes no sense considering he'd abandoned this daughter for all these years.

The bottom line is that Morgan's character isn't at all consistent and the film felt frustrating as a result. Not a terrible film but one that sometimes just didn't make a lot of sense. Plus who wants to see a film where the leading man is actually a big hypocritical weasel?!
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Interesting yarn of man's impact on a culture, both good and bad.
Poseidon-314 June 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Fresh from his Oscar win for "High Noon", Cooper took off to Samoa to film this colorful, rather simple tale of a drifter who makes a difference in the lives of an island tribe. The island, which is filled with obedient natives, is run by iron-fisted missionary Jones, who governs the people through the force of his wardens, beefy islanders who have taken his side in exchange for special privileges. Jones makes the people attend church frequently, adhere to strict curfews and basically abandon their previous ways which once included much lighter clothing and relaxed sexual mores. One day Cooper is dropped off and immediately he and Jones are at each other's throats. Everyone is afraid to assist Cooper with anything, though one young girl (Haynes) stands up and declares that she will aid him in building his home. Eventually, Jones' power is decreased and the people begin to enjoy their freedom again. Cooper, however, is restless and longs to go off on adventures, though circumstances keep bringing him back to the island, hence the title. Things become a bit contrived by the end, but it's not a bad little film and remains interesting through much of it's run time. Location filming and the use of Samoan people (and their dances, etc...) help make the picture unique. Cooper is actually rather fit for a man of 52 and occasionally is caught by the lens in a way that reveals his earlier boyish good looks. He gives a nice performance in the straight-forward, no-nonsense style that was his own. Jones gets to run the gamut from annoying Jim Jones-ish dictator to softened do-gooder. He and Cooper develop nice chemistry together. Haynes is surprisingly authentic and appealing, eschewing a lot of the syrupy and over-stated qualities that many Caucasian actresses brought to their portrayals of island women during the studio era. It's a restrained, but strong performance and she is quite lovely with virtually no make-up. Kruse is wholesome as a young islander who also narrates the film. One of the most striking things about the movie is the fact that sex and pregnancy are treated with a frankness that is surprising for 1953, though, obviously, nothing is shown.
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6/10
Is Cooper doomed to re-live the past?
moviedude13 October 2003
From the first day he was 'deposited' on the tiny South Pacific island, all Cooper was looking for a little peace and quiet. What he got was a bible thumper with a bad attitude, who meant well, but his priorities were a little screwed up. When Cooper hits the island, the "preacher" does everything in his power to let Cooper know he's not welcome. The narrator in the beginning lets us know right away that something is not right with the island natives, but they don't know if they can do anything about it.

After the girl he falls in love with is jailed, Cooper fights to break her out and eventually ends up leading the natives in a revolt. He settles down to a life on the island, but the sea calls to him whenever someone seems to get too close to him. And the man who is his worst enemy turns to him for help when the going gets tough.

As a movie watcher, this is not my "cup of tea." But my significant other recorded it the other night off one of the classic channels and I had nothing better to do, so I started watching it. Next thing I knew, it was after midnight and the movie was ending. As I said, I never really get into the older movies, but I did find this one rather enjoyable and I will be watching for more of Gary Cooper in the future.
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7/10
Perhaps my favorite South Seas drama
vincentlynch-moonoi20 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Of all the "South Sea Islands" films made over the years (including Michener's "Hawaii"), I think I like this one best. Just in general, it doesn't seem to take itself quite as seriously as some of the other such films which have a more aggressive social message about Christianity and how it harmed this part of the world (although that is certainly covered here).

The tale is quite simple, really: a sort of drifter American (Gary Cooper) lands on the island ready to make it his home, but he is ordered away by the Christian missionary (Barry Jones) who seems to have become a bit of a local dictator. Nevertheless, the drifter makes it VERY CLEAR he is going to stay, and the natives, who are under the thumb of the missionary) take a liking to him. A native girl (Roberta Haynes) falls in love with him (naturally), and eventually a child is born and...well, let's not give too much away. Let's just say a rather irresponsible Cooper leaves before the start of WWII, leaving his daughter behind. During the war he returns to paradise to deliver supplies, and the question becomes will he stay or go? At 52, Cooper was a bit old for the part, but you forget that after the first 10 minutes and he does very nicely here. Barry Jones is superb as the missionary...in both iterations of his life there. ROberta Haynes does equally well, though this and one other film are her only notable performances in her career.

Interestingly, the real Samoan Le Mamea Matatumua Ata plays Tonga in the film. He was actually "one of the framers of the Constitution of Samoa...and was the high chief...and earned honors from the British Empire.

As I indicated, the problem caused by missionaries in the South Seas is covered, but they don't hit you over the head with it in terms of making you feel guilty. The main crux of the film are the personal relationships among the characters. As someone who lived as an expat in Asia for a couple of years, I often identify a bit with films like this.
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6/10
Return to Paradise
CinemaSerf30 May 2023
Barry Jones's "Pastor Corbett" rules a tiny Pacific island with a godly rod of iron until the unwelcome arrival of American "Morgan" (Gary Cooper). He's distinctly non-conformist and has no intention of observing the sabbath and the rest of preacher's regime. The latter man's resistance to the government soon elicits support from the put-upon islanders and soon a coup, of sorts, ensues. Once the new order has been established, a form of peace breaks out until WWII arrives on their patch and they find themselves hosting the crew of a shot-down American plane of soon they all want to be shot, pretty quickly! Initially, the clashes of personalities between Cooper and Jones are quite effective, but that quickly falls away and we are left with a rather unremarkable romantic drama that I felt rather dragged, especially the will they/won't they courting scenes between Cooper and Roberta Haynes's "Maeva". If character redemption is your thing, then maybe you'll get a bit more from this - but for me, what made it interesting at the start is allowed to peter out far too swiftly. Some nice island photography of Samoa, though.
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6/10
Just off topic
oxford-6829014 May 2023
Gary Cooper was a 51 y.o man filming return to paradise. I had to google his bio at the beginning of the movie since i couldn't get past how elderly and frail he looked in this movie. I was so consumed by this that I couldn't watch and enjoy the movie since my focus was elsewhere.

Since I need to write more characters o will just ramble off with whatever I can. I can't believe I have to write a long sordid review just to make a point. This is absurd, like seriously why. Anyways if you really like Gary Cooper perhaps this movie might not be exactly ground breaking or perhaps it is I don't know since I was distracted like I said.

Oh I have enough characters.

Bye.
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5/10
It is a paradise, but one that is nearly destroyed by that old time religion and that repeated theme song.
mark.waltz9 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
When the sudden presence of loner Gary Cooper stirs the natives up against obsessive missionary Barry Jones (who has basically made them slaves out of a misguided sense of duty to God), Cooper's romance with island girl Roberta Haynes takes a twist and begins to change him. Native superstitions mixed with Cooper's desire for solitude seem to call on some nasty curse, and the continued presence of Jones (minus his evil disciples which diminishes his power until Cooper leaves) guides the story which leads the island into danger as World War II approaches.

Whike attractive to look at, this film doesn't really have a linear storyline out of the basic conflict of island living and the situation with Jones in the first half hour of the film. His character goes through so many changes that he becomes very unrealistic, and his attempt to atone and explain his motives fall flat. Cooper is basically playing the same type of character he had been playing since the early thirties, handsome and heroic, seemingly ageless, but without real direction and certainly no loyalty to the woman he leaves behind as well as the child she bares.

It seems that every time the story runs out of a place to go, the editor through in a repeat of the song first heard over the opening credits, and it becomes an ear sore after the first few times. The story by James A. Michener was probably better on paper, but so much seem to have been edited out to fit it into a typical 90 minute running time. Certainly, in this era when the code was still prevalent, much of the key of what was going on had to be diminished, so a lot is lost in the transition from Michener's writing to the script. The directions by Mark Robson however is not flawed as he makes what is there flow and keep the audience entertained in spite of the flaws.
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2/10
One Of Cooper's Worst Films
januszlvii27 December 2021
I have done many a review of Hary Cooper films and one thing has become apparent to me, he works best as either an action hero or with an excellent leading lady ( such as Barbara Stanwyck). Cooper in Samoa just does not cut it. There are very few Cooper films where he sucked: One Sunday Afternoon,, Design For Living, Good Sam, Love In The Aftermath. And Return To Parade. Even films of his that were no good, he gives a decent performance ( like Alice In Wonderland). Is it his worst film? No that is Design For Living from Lowe's by One Sunday Afternoon but this film does not cut it for me. 2 stars. Mostly for the scenery.
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8/10
A cult classic in Samoa !
jonseyfamily30 December 2005
Let's get one thing straight, the actors in this movie are portraying Pacific Islanders NOT aboriginals.

I like this movie if only for the fact that it is probably the only Hollywood movie that was filmed in Western Samoa . It still gets played regularly there on one of the countries two t.v stations and it even has a beach proudly named after it where it was filmed on the south side of Upolu, the main island of Samoa.

Maybe not everyones cup of tea here but the story has had similar parallels in real life many times over.

Enjoyable !
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5/10
storyline
duerden6016 August 2019
This is not a review about the film, (which is amiable enough but we have all seen better) but a complaint. Yet look at the storyline regarding this movie written by Les Adams, completely ruins the film which we don't need to watch as he has told us the complete 'plot.' This happens far too often in my view, okay don't read the storyline, if so what is the point of putting it therea And as I finish this rant, there is a question, does this review contain spoilers
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9/10
Gary Cooper escaping trouble and finding new trouble in the South Pacific
clanciai1 July 2017
This is a very unusual Gary Cooper film, quite out of the ordinary, Gary Cooper beach-combing in the South Seas, escaping from a troublesome past, probably the war, and finding new trouble and a second world war in Samoa. It's beautifully made efficiently directed by Mark Robson and has a great story to tell.

It's James Michener's story like continuing from "South Pacific" to another island with another human wreck of the war. Gary Cooper is a hard Irishman used to having to fight to get out of trouble and with a very hard and stubborn head. He gets into total conflict with a local tyrant of a missionary, who bullies the whole island, but the people, all Polynesians, see Gary as their possible saviour, and the conflict is gradually resolved as Gary and Barry Jones learn to cooperate. Domestic trouble awaits, though, and after a personal tragedy he finds himself obliged to continue running away from his fate. After many years he returns to the island just in time for new trouble from the second world war.

Curiously enough, this is not a very renowned or well known film, although it must be ranked among the best of its genre. It's filmed on location, and the insight into the life on the island among the natives is the chief asset and charm of the film. Gary Cooper makes a very convincing performance as a man of destiny having a hard time dealing with it, but ultimately he seems to come to terms with it. The happy end is perhaps the only objectionable detail of the film, which alone is not quite convincing. Like after "South Pacific", you expect the story to continue.
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8/10
Slow start, but it's totally worth it
HotToastyRag20 July 2020
Return to Paradise has a slow start, so if you're not a Gary Cooper fan, just hang in there and wait for it to get better. Trust me, it does. When I first read the synopsis it seemed like a comedy: Gary Cooper goes to a missionary-run island and shakes things up. How was I to know it was a James Michener classic? The exposition when Gary comes to the island, meets missionary Barry Jones, and settles into his grumpy isolation, is a bit slow. But a lot happens in this story; you just have to give it time.

If the protagonist were a different actor, it would have been an infinitely better movie. How many times have I said that about a Gary Cooper movie? To give him as much credit as I can, he does try his best in this movie. He actually does some acting! Still, he may be doing his best, but it's not as good as someone else's best.

I'd like to refrain from telling you about the plot, because it's very interesting to let it all unfold in Michener time and drama. Gary starts off the movie as a rude loner who likes his freedom and doesn't care who he offends. Barry Jones has to accept the intruder, but it makes things harder when one of the local girls is drawn to the aloof man. In addition to the unorthodox romance, I particularly liked Barry and Gary's unique friendship and how it changes throughout the years. You'll also get to see some beautiful location shoots, and as you might expect if you know Michener's work, it's a tearjerker. Enjoy!
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