Paris (2008 film)

Paris

Film poster
Directed by Cédric Klapisch
Produced by Bruno Levy
Written by Cédric Klapisch
Starring Juliette Binoche
Romain Duris
Fabrice Luchini
François Cluzet
Mélanie Laurent
Maurice Bénichou
Karin Viard
Cinematography Christophe Beaucarne
Edited by Francine Sandberg
Distributed by Studio Canal
Release dates
  • February 20, 2008 (2008-02-20)
Running time
130 minutes
Country France
Language French
Budget $12.2 million
Box office $22.8 million[1]

Paris is a 2008 French film by Cédric Klapisch concerning a diverse group of people living in Paris. The film began shooting in November 2006 and was released in February 2008. Its UK release was in July 2008.[2] Commentators have noted the similarity in style of this film to Woody Allen's Manhattan and Robert Altman's Short Cuts.[3]

Plot

The film is set principally in Paris, with one thread of the story set in Africa. Over the course of several months, various stories are intertwined, with different characters and plot threads intersecting.

Cast

  • Juliette Binoche (Élise)
  • Romain Duris (Pierre)
  • Albert Dupontel (Jean)
  • Julie Ferrier (Caroline)
  • Fabrice Luchini (Roland Verneuil)
  • François Cluzet (Philippe Verneuil)
  • Judith El Zein (Mélanie Verneuil)
  • Karin Viard (bakery manager)
  • Gilles Lellouche (Franky)
  • Mélanie Laurent (Laetitia)
  • Sabrina Ouazani (Khadija)
  • Zinedine Soualem (Mourad)
  • Kingsley Kum Abang (Benoit)
  • Olivia Bonamy (Diane)
  • Maurice Bénichou (psychiatrist)
  • Audrey Marnay (Marjolaine)
  • Emmanuel Quatra (Grand Nanar)
  • Annelise Hesme (Victoire)
  • Xavier Robic (Arthur Delamare)
  • Renée Le Calm (Madame Renée)
  • Hubert Saint-Macary (cardiologist)
  • Joseph Malerba (taxi driver)
  • Jean-Pierre Moulin (Professor Vignard)
  • Joffrey Platel (Rémy)
  • Farida Khelfa (Farida)
  • Suzanne Von Aichinger (Susy, 'Miss Bidoche')
  • Marie Drion (Lila, Elise's daughter)
  • Iris Grillet (Simone, Elise's daughter)
  • Arthur Dujardin (Jules, Elise's son)
  • Lila Perrin-Orsini (bakery employee)
  • Lorenzo Larocca (accordionist)
  • Frederic Rose (TV producer)
  • Frederic Cuif (homeless man in tracksuit)
  • Alexia Doucet (Lauryn, Caroline and Jean's daughter)
  • Georges Huppy (Benoit's brother)
  • Audrey Lamy (Fleurist)
  • Jeanne Candel (disabled girl)
  • Anne Benoît (Suzini)
  • Nelly Antignac (Rachel)
  • Juliette Navis (Virginie)
  • Samuel Achache (Sorbonne student)
  • Luciane de Vogue (bakery customer)
  • Sandy Boizard (bakery customer)
  • Jerome Michaud-Lariviere (Baudelaire in TV production)
  • Catherine Pello (bakery customer)
  • Chloé Grillet (architect's child)
  • Pablo Klapisch (architect's child)
  • Thaïs Klapisch (architect's child)
  • Julia Urtado (architect's teenage child)
  • Samuel Urtado (architect's teenage child)
  • Juliette Prier (architect's teenage child)
  • Franck Henry (bar customer)
  • Paolo Coccina, Daniel Delannoy, Jean-Jacques Cirillo (bar band musicians)
  • Jeanne Cellard (old woman at market)
  • Amine Naji (Moroccan boatman)
  • Charlotte Corman (Patricia)
  • Gerard Dufraisse (butcher)
  • Jeremy Bardeau (Diane's friend)
  • Cédric Klapisch (man on the roof; uncredited)

Reception

The film won the Radio-Canada Audience Award at the 2009 edition of the Cinéfranco film festival.

Soundtrack

  1. Kraked Unit - "Munivers De Paris"
  2. Wax Tailor (feat. Charlotte Savary) - "Seize The Day"
  3. Artur Nunes - "Tiea"
  4. Kraked Unit - "L'air Des Cendres"
  5. Rosemary Clooney - "Sway"
  6. Quincy Jones - "Comin' Home Baby"
  7. Philippe Katerine - "Louxor J'adore"
  8. Wilson Pickett - "Land of a Thousand Dances"
  9. Grant Phabao pres. Carlton Livingston and The Lone Ranger - "Running For My Life"
  10. Kraked Unit - "Douala Paris"
  11. Kraked Unit - "I Love Bidoche"
  12. Kraked Unit - "Ah Hum Babe"
  13. Adrag - "I don 't give a F..."
  14. Kraked Unit - "Les Fleurs Du Slam"
  15. Erik Satie - "Gnossienne N°1"

References

  1. http://www.jpbox-office.com/fichfilm.php?id=9952
  2. Peter Bradshaw (2008-07-25). "Paris". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-08-06.
  3. Stephen Holden (2009-09-18). "A Sick Man Embracing a City's Life, Just as His Own Is Threatened". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-17.

External links

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