Paris, Je T'aime Movie Review
Paris, Je T'aime Review

"Paris, Je T'aime" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Oliver Assayas,Frédéric Auburtin,Gérard Depardieu,Gurinder Chadha,Sylvain Chomet,Joel Coen,Ethan Coen,Isabel Coixet,Wes Craven,Alfonso Cuarón,Christopher Doyle,Richard LaGravenese,Vincenzo Natali,Alexander Payne,Bruno Podalydès,Walter Salles,Daniela Thomas,Oliver Schmitz,Nobuhiro Suwa,Tom Twyker,Gus Van SantProducer : Claude Ossard,Emmanuel Benbihy
Screenwiter : Bruno Podalydès,Paul Mayeda Berges,Gurinder Chadha,Gus Van Sant,Ethan Coen,Joel Coen,Walter Salles,Daniela Thomas,Christopher Doyle,Gabrielle Keng,Kathy Li,Isabel Coixet,Nobuhiro Suwa,Sylvain Chomet,Alfonso Cuarón,Olivier Assayas,Oliver Schmitz,Richard LaGravenese,Vincenzo Natali,Wes Craven,Tom Tykwer,Gena Rowlands,Alexander Payne
Starring : Fanny Ardant,Juliette Binoche,Steve Buscemi,Sergio Castellitto,Willem Dafoe,Gérard Depardieu,Marianne Faithfull,Ben Gazzara,Maggie Gyllenhaal,Bob Hoskins,Margo Martindale,Emily Mortimer,Nick Nolte,Catalina Sandino Moreno,Natalie Portman,Miranda Richardson,Gena Rowlands,Ludivine Sagnier,Rufus Sewell,Gaspard Ulliel,Elijah Wood
One would like to think that there at least a few other cities in the world
besides Paris that could have inspired a film as varied in the types of
cinematic pleasure so ably delivered by the anthology piece Paris Je T'Aime --
but it seems unlikely. This isn't due to an unavailability of good stories or
locations in many other great metropolises, but more because being able to
dangle the possibility of shooting in Paris in front of the world's greatest
directors is going to be so much more enticing. Also, there are few other
cities besides Paris that come with such a powerful and multifarious wealth of
preassociated images and emotions for both filmmaker and audience to both draw
upon and react against. So what could have been a collection of short films
with a few highs, several lows, and a lot of muddled in-betweens is in fact a
remarkably and consistently imaginative body of work, practically giddy with
energy, that only rarely touches the ground.
Project overseers Emmanuel Benbihy and Tristan Carné wanted to create a
cinematic map of Paris, with each short film representing one of the city's 20
arrondissements (neighborhoods). They ended up with 18 films, none of them more
than a few minutes long and directed by a glittering, international roster of
filmmakers. While none of the films here are anything approaching masterpieces,
hardly a one is in any way a chore to sit through, which has to be some sort of
an accomplishment.
Although hard to pin down due to its multiplicity of points of view, Paris Je
T'Aime's take on the City of Lights is neither overly romantic nor cynical,
located somewhere in the vast stretch of realism between the giddy fairy tale
Amélie and Julie Delpy's scabrous anti-valentine 2 Days in Paris. Some approach
the city from a tourist's point of view, like in the Coen brothers' piece, in
which a haggard-looking Steve Buscemi (laden with guide book and bag of Mona
Lisa postcards) has a tussle in a Metro station with a tough who doesn't like
anybody looking at his femme. It's a one-note joke and rather weak in
execution. Although covering well-trod terrain for him, Alexander Payne's film
-- narrated by a Colorado woman on vacation, with possibly the worst French
accent outside of a junior high language class -- has more depth to it, seeming
at first to be nothing more than mockery, but finding a resonant moment of
grace in the fish out of water scenario.
Few of the films make any attempt to move past the bourgeois realms of
professional, creative, and student life (the city's vast immigrant and working
classes are mostly invisible here); the exceptions to that rule, however, are
rather extraordinary. Oliver Schmitz' Place des Fêtes is a powerful miniature
portrait of heartache that starts with an African immigrant dying in a plaza
after being stabbed by a gang member, and singing a song to the beautiful and
rattled young medic who is trying to save his life. Not only does the piece
have the smell of real life about it, Schmitz seems to be trying harder here
than many of the name directors; some of whom, talented as they are (like Tom
Tykwer, Gus Van Sant, and Alfonso Cuarón), fall back on tricks familiar from
their feature work or simply go on auto-pilot, hoping that the romance of the
city pulls them through. Usually, they're right.
A nice surprise, and somewhat symbolic of the film as a whole, is Wes Craven's
Père-Lachaise. What would seem on paper to be a bad sort of joke (sticking the
horror director in the city's most famous cemetery) turns into something more
unexpected, as Rufus Sewell and Emily Mortimer wander among the graven gothic
stones, worrying in a jaunty fashion over their relationship, before finding
resolution at Oscar Wilde's grave. It's a romantic trifle, to be sure, but an
extremely well-observed one that doesn't insult your intelligence. Sometimes
that's all you can ask for.
Aka Paris, I Love You.
Seen any zombies around here?
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



