Watching the rather tiresome Tiara Tahiti (1962) yesterday evening led me to reflect that when I was a boy growing up in the 50s and early 60s, foreigners in films seemed to fall largely in to three categories:
1. Villainous, such as Eric Pohlmann and Anton Diffring.
2. Comic, like Fernandel or Catinflas
3. The "starlet" whose presence in the cast list was usually announced by the phrase "And introducing." As a pre-adolescent boy before the hormones began to rage I never really appreciated the decorative value in the film of these young ladies. Now that those same hormones have gone into retirement I still find the presence of these actresses, either archly kittenishly in comedies or mysterious and aloof in more serious offerings, intensely irritating for, the truth is, most of them posessed the acting talents of your average gatepost. Did Tiara Tahiti's introduction, Rosenda Monteros, ever go on to do anything else, I wonder. Do I really care?
The best thing, apart from some amusing cameo appearances by Libby Morris, about Tiara Tahiti, I felt, was the excellent Herbert Lom ....playing a foreign comic villain!