Language - French
Genre - Comedy, Romance, Drama
**ing - Juliette Binoche, Romain Duris and Fabrice Luchini
Release - 2008
Paris is a multi-storyline ensemble piece set in Paris (obviously!). The movie is written and Directed by Cédric Klapisch , who seems to have a panache for multi-character affairs; L'Auberge Espagnole (2002), Russian Dolls (2005). Paris is undoubtedly the most ambitious effort by the director with an impressive star cast and ensemble plot elements.
Paris in essence is a story about love, tragedy and hope. Though the movie has multiple story-lines, it primarily revolves around a young cabaret dancer Pierre (Romain Duris) who is diagnosed with a heart condition and needs a heart transplant (with roughly 40% chance of success), and his elder caretaker divorced sister Élise (Juliette Binoche). There are also other parallel story-lines, a history professor Roland (Fabrice Luccini) going through his mid-life crisis who's also a presenter of a new TV show unraveling the history of the great city and is infatuated with one of his young students (Melanie laurent), Roland's polar-opposite 'normal' brother with a pregnant wife and others.
Paris, for the large part, is a reflection on the lives of the bourgeois working class populace of Paris. There are also a few fleeting scenes of a North African man from Cameroon attempting to make his way to Paris, that could have well been an afterthought from Cédric Klapisch rather than a integral part of the film. The movie doesn't really try to capture the diversity across social strata but rather through individual characters. The movie has a largely buoyant feel to it despite the tragic elements, arguably increasing it's appeal to a wider audience.
Sadly though, the movie fails to realize it's potential. Though the character takes are interesting and engaging, there are too many loose-ends by the time the credits start rolling after 120 minutes. With the exception of the brother-sister story of Pierre and Elise, and the humorous professor-student sub-plot revolving around the fling between Roland and Laetitia, other story-lines have a feeling of being left orphaned. But despite it's weaknesses to evolve into a truly complex and sophisticated affair, it still is a largely enjoyable movie to spend a evening on, especially if you are a great admirer of the city of Paris.

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