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Photo of the Week

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Even art-loving dogs had to wrap up during the recent cold snap in Paris. Photo: Eric Tenin of Paris Daily Photo.

 

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Paris Update Fashion Flash

FRENCH MICHAEL MOORE TAKES ON
NATIONAL FOOD INDUSTRY

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The motto of Le République de la Malbouffe: "Opacity, Obesity, Precarity."

Xavier Denamur, the owner of five small restaurants in Paris, is a man on a crusade. It began with the 2009 decrease in value-added tax from 21.6 percent to 5.5 percent on restaurant meals, which he says favored big chain restaurants without helping the small independents as promised. Going beyond that issue, he blames French government policies and a lack of transparency in the food industry for the increasing industrialization of food preparation and delivery, the degradation of food quality in France, and increasing obesity and public health costs. One of his campaigns calls for legislation that would create a label informing restaurant customers whether the food is prepared from fresh ingredients on-site or is factory-made or frozen.

Denamur has formed an association called La République de la Malbouffe (The Republic of Bad Food) and has just released a documentary film of the same name, directed by Jacques Goldstein. Unfortunately, the film lacks focus and does not get his laudable message across clearly. Shown only in a handful of Paris cinemas, it is also available on DVD (with issue no. 17 of Rue89 magazine, for €5). Denamur continues to hold debates and chase politicians, hoping to get them to listen to his call for transparency. “My goal is to get citizens interested in politics again,” he says, by encouraging them to vote and write to their representatives. Heidi Ellison

 

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Paris Update Art Notes

ANDREAS SLOMINSKI


Recent works by Andreas Slominski at the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris (through February 29). Video by Nikolaï Saoulski. Click here for larger screen.

 

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 Circulation(s)

> Festival promoting the work of young European photographers, Bagatelle Garden, Bois de Boulogne, Feb. 25-March 25

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.

Nouveau Festival

>A "cross-disciplinary" festival at the Centre Pompidou. Free admission. Feb. 22-March 12.

Paris Fine Art

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

Robert Altman Film Festival

> Cinémathèque Française, Paris, through March 11.

Salon International de l'Agriculture

> A barnyard in Paris, with the best of the country's livestock and products made from them, Feb. 19-27

Steven Spielberg Film Festival

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

Touts-Petits Cinéma

> Film festival for kids from 18 months to 4 years, Forum des Images, Feb. 18-26.

 

 

Film

 

Faut que Ça Danse

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The Tyranny of the Family

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Salomon (Jean-Pierre Marielle) makes like Fred Astaire. Photo: Jean-Claude Lothier

If Tolstoy were alive today, he might have rephrased the famous first sentence of Anna Karenina to read: “Happy families are all alike; every dysfunctional family is dysfunctional in its own way.”

Faut que ça Danse (Gotta Dance), directed by Noémie Lvovsky, is an ambitious, sprawling free-for-all of a movie, rich in eccentric characters and incident, but what it really boils down to is a portrait of a lovably dysfunctional family. It’s often silly or even irritating, but somehow you can’t help staying interested in these people right to the end, much as you would your own family.

A quick of summary of the “plot”: Geneviève (Bulle Ogier) is a nutcase who long ago left her husband, Salomon Bellinsky (Jean-Pierre Marielle), and lives with her caretaker, a kindhearted African man called Mr. Mootoosamy (Bakary Sangaré). Her apartment is more or less empty because she gives everything away. While she has moments of lucidity, most of the time she is lost in space. No one seems to know what is wrong with her.

Salomon is an anglophile who speaks English to his ex-wife when he visits her, has memorized all of Fred Astaire’s movies and takes tap-dance lessons. A Jew, he refuses to speak about what happened to him during World War II, during which most of his relatives died in Auschwitz.

Their daughter, Sarah, played by the excellent Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, narrates the story and runs back and forth between her two parents, trying to maintain some level of sanity in the family, helped by her steady, sweet rock of a husband, François, (Arié Elmaleh).

Geneviève is running out of money and soon there won’t even be enough to pay the devoted Mr. Mootoosamy’s salary. Salomon, in addition to tap dancing, is busy meeting women through the personal ads. After being rejected as too old by one woman, and rejecting another because she is too old, he rather improbably hooks up with the much younger Violette. (Sabine Azema; is it just me or does everyone find this actress supremely annoying in every role she plays?).

The film has many gratuitous scenes. To illustrate François’s character, for example, Lvovsky shows him training a mouse to run across a wire to reach a piece of cheese (I’m still trying to figure out what that was supposed to tell us about him). That’s about it; for the most of the rest of the film, he stays in the background looking kind and being helpful. Then there’s the scene where Salomon thinks he has had an attack and runs upstairs to the office of a creepy, ancient doctor dressed in military uniform who wants to examine his prostate and warns him of the dangers of having sex with women for a man of his age. This makes for a very surreal parenthesis in the film.

Then there are the dream sequences, the best a black-and-white animation sequence involving a multiplying Hitler, which hint in a rather heavy-handedly Freudian way at what’s going on in the characters’ subconscious worlds.

In the end, Lvovsky seems to be suggesting that dancing cures everything – and maybe she’s right. You forgive the film's minor irritants because she has taken so much trouble to create vivid, well-rounded characters with many different sides, not all of them pretty.

In his one big speech, François tries to explain to the uncomprehending mother why Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather is a great movie (Faut que ça Danse is full of references to other films). fairly summing up this movie as well: “It’s about the family,” he says, “and love…in the family. It’s about the tyranny of the family.”

A word on the music, an important component of the film: it was composed by jazz great Archie Shepp.

Heidi Ellison

© 2008 Paris Update

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