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Photo of the Week

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Just a dusting of snow on Montmartre's cobblestones on Tuesday. Photo: Eric Tenin of Paris Daily Photo.

 

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TRENDY TAPAS

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The bar at Mojita et Bob on Rue Oberkampf.

The lower stretch of Rue Oberkampf might well get its mojo back from the Belleville end with the recent arrival of tapas bar/restaurant Mojita et Bob (3, rue Oberkampf, 75011 Paris; tel.: 01 58 30 88 59), run by a charming young husband and wife team, and animated by the buzz of a happy young crowd. "Bob," by the way, is not the husband's name – it refers to "bring your own bottle," but they have plenty on hand, along with an extensive cocktail list, including, of course, mojitos. The tapas come from the creative end of the spectrum, with most dishes served in glasses or ramekins on rectangles of slate. Expect blood sausage with spiced banana and speculoos, grilled polenta with Emmenthal and Espelette peppers, pea mousse with chorizo, sardine rillettes, all very tasty. Not a patatas bravas in sight. It's a long way from the simple origins of authentic Spanish tapas, but these are done so well that you can forgive the occasional forays into culinary gymnastics. Colin Eaton

 

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GOURMET GROUPON

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An illustration from GourmanDeal′s Web Site.

Two young (24 and 26) French businessmen, tired of working for big corporations, have had the excellent idea of launching GourmanDeal, an upscale, more exclusive Groupon-style site for restaurants only, great news for those of us who have had far-less-than-satisfactory experiences with Groupon restaurants (read all about it here). GourmanDeal (in French only for the moment) offers an opportunity to try more expensive eateries like the excellent Le Quinze de Lionel Fleury without breaking the bank. The site′s founders, Damien Nantermet and Bruno Bouzid, promise to keep their standards high and plan to expand to other French and European cities. Heidi Ellison

 

Paris Update This Week's Events

For full details about an event, click on its name to visit the official Web site (in English when available).

Festival Au Fil des Voix

World music artists from Tunisia, Morocco, Guinea, Italy, Greece and more. Alhambra, Paris, through Feb. 11.

Ice Skating Rinks

Hôtel de Ville, Paris, through March 4.

Leonardo Live

> Filmed tour of the Leonardo da Vinci exhibition at the National Gallery in London, various cinemas, Paris, Feb. 16.

London Calling

> Festival of British films, Forum des Images, Paris, through Feb. 29.

Paris Fine Art

> Art and antique fair, Palais des Congrès, Paris, Feb. 10-20.

Robert Altman Film Festival

> Cinémathèque Française, Paris, through March 11.

Soldes

> Retail sales in Paris: through Feb. 14

Fonds Solidarité Sida Afrique

> Benefit concert with Yael Naim and many others, open to donors to this fund to fight AIDS in Africa, Cirque d'Hiver, Paris, Feb. 13

Steven Spielberg Film Festival

> The entire œuvre, Cinémathèque Française, Paris, through March 3.

 

Film

 

Cow-boy

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Funny Peculiar

cow-boy
Benoît Poelvoorde as a touching loser.

Benoît Poelvoorde. You probably don’t recognize the name, but you might remember him as the charismatic serial killer in his 1992 debut, Man Bites Dog. Since then he has gone on to become one of France’s most beloved actors (even though, like other French idols, including Jacques Brel, he’s actually Belgian).

Poelvoorde, who has constructed a career that swings between broad comedy (in, say, Podium, in which he starred as an impersonator of French disco king Claude François) and smaller, more personal pieces, manages to invest even his broader roles with a certain sadness and empathy for the loser: the man who has big dreams but lacks the talent to make them real.

His latest film, Cow-boy, is definitely in that register. The second feature he’s worked on with Belgian director Benoît Mariage (the first was 1999’s wonderful Les Convoyeurs Attendent), Poelvoorde plays Daniel Piron, a TV presenter who, tired of his road-safety show, tries to make a documentary about an infamous event in Belgian history by reuniting the then-children who were on a bus hijacked in 1980 by anti-capitalist Tony Sacchi (played with fabulous levels of sleaze by Gilbert Melki). Daniel thinks this is a great idea and that the documentary will reveal how society has changed. Of course, it only reveals just how much he hasn’t.

Like the character he played in Les Convoyeurs, Poelvoorde’s Daniel is a man with firmly held beliefs, beliefs he can’t let go off even when reality does its best to show him how wrong he is. His ambition is far greater then his talents, which leaves him incapable of understanding why no one (including his wife – a distant Julie Depardieu – and his colleagues) sees things as he does.

In one telling scene, two of Daniel’s colleagues discuss the first images of his film in the office toilets. Unbeknownst to them, Daniel is in the cubicle, and, after they have thoroughly trashed the work, the camera doesn’t show Daniel rushing out to defend himself, but slowly lifting his feet from the ground so they won’t find out he’s heard them. Mariage’s film is full of moments of such quotidian tragedy, snippets of daily disappointment.

Cow-boy is delicately scripted (it never patronizes its characters, even Daniel), intelligently (and simply) filmed and wonderfully played by all. And just when the film begins to lose you – it gets hard to take any more of Daniel’s self-destructive behavior – Mariage conjures up an ending that couldn’t be more perfect. In the image of the rest of the film, it’s sad, inspiring, happy, comic, tragic and ever so slightly out of tune.

Tom Ridgway

© 2008 Paris Update

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