2 Days in Paris Movie Review
2 Days in Paris Review
"2 Days in Paris" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Julie DelpyProducer : Christophe Mazodier,Thierry Potok
Screenwiter : Julie Delpy
Starring : Julie Delpy,Adam Goldberg,Marie Pillet,Albert Delpy
Julie Delpy is a rare triple threat, equally talented as a writer, director, and
actor. And she's bilingual, too. Such an overachiever! Her romantic comedy 2 Days
in Paris is an engaging and witty escape to the City of Lights. Though it's slightly tarnished
by an overreliance on Woody Allen tropes, it's still a lot of fun. And Paris always
looks so good on film.
At 35 years old, Marion (Delpy) and Jack (Adam Goldberg) are at that stage of their
two-year relationship when they're wondering what's next. A two-week vacation in
Venice has not turned out well, and before they return to New York, they stop off
in Paris, Marion's hometown, so Jack can meet the parents and Marion can reconnect with
her Parisian friends.
Like Woody Allen, Jack is a migraine-prone, neurotic, motor-mouthed xenophobe and
germophobe who gets upset by strange sights and smells and can riff on the dangers
of bathroom mold for hours. (Marion, in true French style, says the mold is like
blue cheese.) Afraid to take the subway because of his fears of terrorism, and unable
to speak French, Jack finds himself dependent on Marion.
Her delightful ex-hippie parents (Marie Pillet and Albert Delpy, Julie Delpy's real-life
folks) intimidate him. Lively and friendly and full of stories (Mom remembers doing
it with Jim Morrison in 1969), they terrify Jack with a lunch of braised rabbit an
d overwhelm him with rapid-fire French.
But the trouble really begins when Jack accompanies Marion to various parties where
she seems to run into ex-boyfriends constantly. The fact that they are all taller,
cooler and better-looking than Jack only makes things worse. After a few text message
mix-ups rattle him further, he has no choice but to call Marion a slut, as if he had
expected her to wait 33 years in a convent for him to show up on a white horse. Marion,
an unpredictably volatile sort, explodes, and the two separate.
Alone in the scary foreign city, Jack immediately starts having quirky adventures,
running into a would-be vegan terrorist targeting fast-food restaurants and being
accused of mugging a woman. Meanwhile, Marion tries to come to terms with her non-committal pa
st and wonders if Jack is really the kind of guy she wants to spend the rest of her
life with.
Delpy's banter is quick and funny, and the whole film feels wonderfully improvised.
The couple's bickering is precisely the kind of stuff you hear when you pass by arguing
couples on any city street. The only thing keeping this good film from being great is Del
py's tendency to play Jack's many neuroses for easy laughs. If she had toned down
the Woody Allenisms by about 20 percent, 2 Days in Paris would have felt really reall
y real. As it is, it's still a lark, yet another good cinematic opportunity to spend
a few days wandering around a beautiful city.
I think I saw a McDonald's.
Reviewer: Don Willmott





