Dans Paris (2006)
Facts
| Directed by | Christophe Honore |
| Cast | Guy Marchand, Marie-France Pisier, Romain Duris, Louis Garrel, Joana Preiss and Marie France Pisier |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2005 |
| DVD Release | May 6, 2008 |
| Running Time | 92 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 796019809238 |
| Buy this item | $16.99 at Amazon.com As of Aug 30 16:58 EDT (details) 1 DVD, WELLSPRING/GENIUS, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, DVD-Video, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: French (Original Language), English (Subtitled), English (Dubbed) Or 42 new from $11.50, 11 used from $9.75 |
About Dans Paris
Paul depressed from his recent break-up with Anna returns home to Paris and moves back in with his divorced father and amorous younger brother Jonathan. While his carefree sibling and doting father try in vain to cheer him up a visit from his mother seems to be the only thing that brings him joy. When Paul is then left in the house to brood and talk to one of his brother's girlfriends he begins to realize that while things haven't gone according to plan one can always find something to live for. System Requirements:Run Time: 92 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA/ALL WASHED UP UPC: 796019809238 Manufacturer No: 80923 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A bittersweet love letter to Paris and French cinema. |
G. Merritt May 2, 2008
| Pretensive but Extraordinary Performances |
Pretensive but Extraordinary Performances
Amos Lassen
Here is an attempt at a feel good movie which looks to nostalgia to make its point. "Dans Paris" tells of Anna who just left Paul who moves back in with his father in Paris. His younger brother, Jonathan, is a casual student who also lives with his father and does not have much of a life aside from chasing women and playing at being busy. This lifestyle seems to be a cover up from the fact that he has not been able to get over the death of his sister. Paul also begins to sink into depression. The film, thereby, deals with depression and with the idea that it can be cured with a little love and care from members of the family. However, the women that we meet in the film cannot help--they are either bores or sex toys for Jonathan. The men are quite the opposite--they are warm and show both emotion and sensitivity. They love and they show love.
Director Christophe Honore gives us a movie that is entertaining to a point and shows a balance of moods as he studies relationships--between siblings and between parents and children. The dialog is smart and the contrast of characters is amazing. The two male leads, Romain Duris and Louis Garret, are two of France's hottest stars and they give excellent performances. The two brothers are a stuffy of dark and light. Jonathan is the narrator of the film but really a lesser character in the plot. He is a foil to his brother Paul because he succeeds with women. He is full of life while his brother is dark-spirited and without much hope. We do not see his depression as one-dimensional but he suffers from inertia and glumness.
Facial expressions many times say more than the dialog but there is a depth to the characterizations. The mood set is tragic-comic and the movie is an actor's dream.
April 26, 2008
| Sift through the pretension |
DANS PARIS is essentially an interlaced flashback concerning the degradation of a relationship between Paul (Duris) and Anna (Preiss). Anna has just left Paul who, annihilated by the separation, moves back with his father in Paris. His younger brother Jonathan, a casual student, still lives in his father's apartment and spends most of his time womanizing and fooling around. Honore's film becomes a meditation on how people choose to suffer, how others choose to allow or challenge our model of suffering, the inevitability and incongruity of healing despite our best efforts to wallow, and is none the less a compelling structural exercise.
DANS PARIS, the fifth film in as many years by writer/director Christophe Honore (Ma Mere), is through and through a constant collapsing and building of the fourth wall, both attitudinally and structurally. It is at once a Brechtian display of self-awareness and reflexion (Jonathon talking to the audience), and with its counter cannon of bare intimacy (insular moments between quarrelling lovers, Paul singing along to music in his underwear) it is a film that is equally, if not more so, a work of inclusion.
And for anyone who appreciates classic french cinema, DANS PARIS will be an alternately melancholic and delightful love letter to the French New Wave...and I mean in spades! February 7, 2008
| Beyond The Valley of Pretentiousness - Absolute Drivel! |
I mean, I wish to God they "didn't" live up to every cliché chucked at their cinema making, but this is absolute pretentious dross on a scale that is difficult to believe.
Every joke about French cinema is painfully evident on 'Inside Paris' - the semi naked sexless actress talking deeply about life and philosophy as her ludicrous lover does his tie and is contemptuous of her in that stupid male French way. Then of course he can't live without her - so he cries - he tries suicide, but unfortunately for us all, it doesn't work. His brother is a feckless idiot. The men are so weak and whiny in this movie; you just want to smack them over the head with a copper-bottomed frying pan. Characters talk to the camera and look at the audience for no discernible reason. The story (what there is of one) is about obsession - when the only obsession you have is with the fast-forward button on the remote control - please find me some redeeming factor - please - and of course - your remote can't find any - because they're not there. Your remote control tries to empathize with you by giving a sympathetic look - suckered again - eh pal!
In some respects this film's awfulness isn't funny. There have been superb French films in the last few years - of course there has - "La Vie En Rose", "36", "Moliere" and "8 Women" spring to mind - but this movie is one of the very real reasons why French cinema is greeted not with interest - but with a snigger and a titter. Which is a crying shame. It really is. Marion Cotillard has taken an award for "La Vie En Rose" and it's not surprising - it's simply one of the most astonishing performances given in cinema in 20 years! I kid you not! So why, oh why, do the French then go and produce obvious pretentious dross like this?? There's a scene where the obsessed man phones his woman and (wait for it) they 'sing' (yes sing) some 'philosophy' down the phone - as each actor tries desperately to look like this is normal and very deep! It has to be seen to be believed!
Please Please Please! Do not rent or buy this appalling piece of crap! It makes Hostel Part 2 look like high art! Castration or this - take the chop mate! January 3, 2008
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