Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Often, it seems that the glories of the omnibus film are all but forgotten. Not only from the obvious standpoint of overwhelming variety in one movie - variance in tone, mood, theme, directorial style - but from the standpoint of introducing us to brilliant, interesting filmmakers whose contributions to the cinematic canon we've overlooked, virtually compelling us to chart out new viewing territory. At its best, an omnibus film can function as a giant, multicolored tapestry - a byzantine mosaic where each tile tells its own resonant story. From a business standpoint, the reasons for the form's decline are simple - they functioned as a clever way for opportunistic Euro megaproducers to reel in lucrative returns and massive prestige while doling out scant income for their participating directors. As the cinematic art of the 40s, 50s, 60s and 70s yielded to the more lucrative Hollywood commercialism of the '80s, '90s and beyond, this form faded slowly from view.
Paris je t'aime, an ode to the 'City of Lights' engineered by executive producer Rafi Choudry, and directed by 18 international filmmakers, each given 5-7 minutes to helm a segment set in and around Paris - poses a direct challenge to this obsolescence, and recalls the 'film-a-sketch' production style at its finest. Inevitably, not everything in the movie works - in fact, far from it - but, with one five-minute exception, the film never sinks below the level of engaging, moving and genuinely interesting. Even when we see something that doesn't quite "click," we're never bored. The directors featured herein include such varied voices as Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas,
Gus Van Sant,
Wes Craven, Alfonso Cuaron, Joel and
Ethan Coen,
Alexander Payne, Suwa Nobuhiro, and
Sylvain Chomet. Many tackle the shortened narrative form admirably and successfully, albeit with vastly different strategies. A few (such as the Coens, with their tale of a hapless, dorky American beaten senseless by a jealous boyfriend) tell a brief narrative with a full story arc; others (such as Payne, with his extraordinary glimpse of a geeky, middle-aged American postal worker, and her tourist's-eye view of Paris) etch out a character study and establish a perspective in a remarkably short period of time. And a few others seem content to catch a haunting behavioral insight that stays with us but resists an arc (such as Salles and Thomas, with their wondrous glimpse of a working class Brazilian nanny's inchoate longings for her estranged infant). The latter delivers whopping emotional impact, thanks to the co-directors' faith in cinematic language - by merely fixing their camera on the nanny's gaze to an open Parisian window, we can visualize her thoughts and spirit wandering off to be with her baby.
The best of the lot, of course, improbably manage to accomplish all three goals in their brief window of time onscreen. Two wax particularly strong: one by Suwa Nobuhiro, another by Oliver Schmitz. The Nobuhiro should go down as a classic, with its heart-rending tale of a mother (
Juliette Binoche) who loses her little boy, and is given one final chance to say goodbye to him, by a spirit on horseback (
Willem Dafoe). And another, by Schmitz - the tale of a homeless man and his final, deathbed meeting with the unsung love of his life - feels supremely intransigent and ingeniously structured. These segments carry everything one looks for in a short film, or even in a motion picture per se - to such an extent that an expansion of either would feel superfluous, if not ruinous.
Not all of the directors fare so well. A few seem crippled by the shortened running time; despite wondrous content while it is actually onscreen, Bruno Podalydes's opener feels cruelly truncated - as if it is only the prologue to a tender-hearted, finely-felt romance, whose lack of full development leaves us wanting so much more;
Isabel Coixet uses heavy-handed voice-over narration to convey a melodramatic story that virtually demands its own full-length movie, with more character arcs and narrative twists than most two-hour features. But only one segment qualifies as a pure abomination: Chris Doyle's infuriatingly pretentious, incoherent avant-garde bit about an elderly eccentric (
Barbet Schroeder) hawking salon products in an Asian district of Paris. Richard La Gravenese's sketch - an homage to an old married couple - threatens to become equally unintelligible but is saved, just barely, by the sheer pleasure of seeing
Bob Hoskins and
Fanny Ardant together onscreen.
The film's only other major lapse - if it can be called that - is simply the fact that many of the stories could ostensibly unfold anywhere. If they represent thematic variations on the various Parisian neighborhoods where they transpire, those connections are tenuous at best and will fall well outside the radar of most American viewers.
Overall, Paris je t'aime represents a treasure chest that yields innumerable rich pleasures and not a few disappointments. And - like the
September 11 movie - it should sound a wake up call to resurrect the omnibus form on the basis of art, if not commerce. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide