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Cinema Reviews - 28 February 2008 28/02/2008 00:00
In this week's Expatica cinema section - in collaboration with Picturenose - James Drew reviews Paris, Cédric Klapisch's multi-perspective take on life in the city.
Tales of ordinary sadness
It's not quite yet a cinematic cliché, but the format chosen by Cédric Klapisch (Les Poupées russes (2005), Ni pour, ni contre (bien au contraire) (2002)) in Paris has antecedents in films as diverse as Robert Altman's Short Cuts (1993), Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994), and most recently Alejandro González Iñárritu's Babel (2006), namely seemingly diverse stories that are in fact linked by chains visible only to viewers – no man is an island, as John Donne put it.But, while Paris's predecessors to a large extent opted more for sensationalism to make their point, Klapisch's film has a quiet yet affecting sobriety to it, both in perspective and performances.
Klapisch regular Romain Duris plays Pierre, a dancer who needs a heart transplant – his chances of surviving, even should he find a donor, are iffy.
Juliette Binoche plays his sister Élise, a social worker who brings her children to live with her ailing brother. From their window, they watch the developing love life of Laetitia (Mélanie Laurent), who's hitched to Rémy (Joffrey Platel), but is also being wooed by Sorbonne Paris history professor and longtime bachelor Roland Verneuil (Fabrice Lucchini), currently undergoing a mid-life crisis and opening his heart to a psychiatrist (Maurice Bénichou) while he's working on a soul-destroying 'popular' TV series about his area of expertise...and so on.
There are other stories at play here, but to list them all would be pointless. The point is, however, that Klapisch, a gifted director, does make you care. He conveys the surface banality of everyday life, yet in so doing makes you eager to learn more. This is precisely why so much of the film remains unresolved; the director's perspective and realistically fluid camerwork encouraged this reviewer to leave the cinema with a renewed interest in the lives of others while walking home - a story on every corner, if you like.
There is perhaps the mistake of the narrative weight being spread a touch too evenly – of course, this could be defended on the grounds that every tale told is equally important, but the film seems to lack central focus as a result, the illusion of complexity over actual depth.
But it's a pleasure to see Binoche back in a role providing her with an opportunity to be mature, vivacious, sexy and sad at the same time, and overall acting honours go to Lucchini, with his take on an intellectual discovering that affairs of the heart, be they family or femme fatale cannot be taught (or learned in school).
For the most part fulfilling and captivating, Paris provides a rare chance to discover the lives of others.
130 mins.
On release across Europe from 27 February.
Read our previous interview 'Inspired: Cédric Klapisch'
Coupable
Laetitia Masson, director of Pourquoi (pas) le Brésil? (2004) and La Repentie (2002), offers a tale of everyday murder – succesful businessman Paul Kaplan is found dead one Sunday morning, a kitchen knife in his back.
The two suspects are his wife Blanche (Anne Consigny), a pious and frustrated woman, and Marguerite (Hélène Fillières), the couple's chef, still living with her parents at the age of 34 years, but still dreaming of her Prince Charming – could the inspector assigned to the case be her man? Blanche, meanwhile is to be represented by young lawyer Lucien Lambert (Jérémie Renier), who sees the case as the opportunity of a lifetime. A tense little whodunnit.
105 mins.
On release across Europe.
James Drew
'Expatica's weekly cinema-review section is brought to you in collaboration with Picturenose.com'
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