Forget Paris Movie Review
Forget Paris Review
"Forget Paris" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Billy CrystalProducer : Billy Crystal
Screenwiter : Billy Crystal,Lowell Ganz,Babaloo Mandel
Starring : Billy Crystal,Debra Winger,Joe Mantegna,Cynthia Stevenson,Richard Masur,Julie Kavner,William Hickey
It's a shame that so many romantic comedies are in current release, because
inevitably, something good is going to be overlooked due to the cinematic glut
of warm fuzzies. As the third of its type in about as many weeks, Forget Paris
is one of the strongest entries of the genre.
Billy Crystal directs and stars in this Baby Boomer romantic fable about a pair
of star-crossed lovers (Crystal, as Mickey, and Debra Winger, as Ellen) who
can't seem to get their relationship right. Going through a dozen iterations
of "boy meets girl, boy loses girl," the couple's story is told through a
narrative from their friends over dinner.
Mickey is a tempestuous basketball referee (and some of the film's funniest
moments are with him on the courts with the players--unfortunately, they have
been overplayed ad nauseum in the film's trailers). Ellen is the newly found
love of his life, an American expatriate working in Paris for an airline which
loses Mickey's dead father, who is being flown to France for his burial.
What follows is Woody Allen-esque hilarity. The couple really click and
finally get together. Ellen leaves Paris to be with Mickey. Mickey quits his
traveling ref job to be with Ellen. Ellen's father moves in. No one is happy,
and one thing after another conspires against our tragic couple to keep things
from getting better. The bulk of the film is their various attempts at working
things out, none of which seem to work.
Crystal and Winger (cast against type and pulling it off well) have some great
chemistry, and they play off each other perfectly with characteristic sarcasm.
Using the friends as a narrative plot device is weak, but it is understated
enough not to distract you from the rest of the picture.
As a romance, Forget Paris is hauntingly realistic and downright hilarious, and
although it gets a bit silly in places (as is expected when Crystal is around),
it doesn't flinch in showing you the unglamorous flip side to the Hollywood
Ending. I'd wager that most of the audience will leave the theater with a
"been there, done that" sentiment that balances the comedy perfectly.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





