Vivian van Blerk

"Métamorphoses, Cheminées, The Attic Pictures"

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Beckel Odille Boïcos

February 2-March 10

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Photo of the Week

Paris-Update-Snow-in-Paris-2012

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

 

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Paris Update Flash News

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

 

Two Days in Paris

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Culture Clash

Two Days in Paris, Julie Delpy

An ex-boyfriend shows Marion (Julie Delpy) his three-dimensional portrait of her.

Not only does actress Julie Delpy act in Two Days in Paris, but she also wrote, directed and edited her second feature film, and composed the music. The result is surprising success: a smart, witty Woody-Allen-style comedy with the human warmth of Annie Hall and a bit of the frenetic paranoia of Martin Scorcese’s After Hours.

The story is simple. Marion (Delpy), who is French, and her American boyfriend Jack (Adam Goldberg) are a 35-year-old couple in love. On their way back home to New York from a holiday in Venice, they stop off in Paris for two days to visit Marion’s family. Jack soon discovers that her parents (played by Delpy’s real mother and father, actors Marie Pillet and Albert Delpy), veterans of the 1968 political movement and former swingers (she is supposed to have had a fling with Jim Morrison back in the day), and her sister Rose (Aleksia Landeau) are a bunch of nuts.

Jack, who doesn’t speak French, makes a halfhearted attempt to connect with them, but things start falling apart when Marion’s former lovers begin to pop up one after another and reveal details about her past. The visit also brings out Marion’s volatile Latin temperament, and Jack watches in dismay as she argues publicly with various people they run into. The revelations of the two-day stay in Paris look set to destroy their relationship.

Two Days in Paris is full of clichés about the French and Americans, but they are very effectively played for laughs, and no one laughed harder than the French members of the audiences at the stereotypes about themselves. Most of the French characters in the film are depicted as obsessed with sex and food, and Parisian taxi drivers are by turns racist, sexist, psychopaths or pick-up artists (one even offers to give Delpy a child while she’s riding in the back seat with her uncomprehending but suspicious boyfriend). American tourists are fat, wear Bush-Cheney T-shirts and travel in packs as they try to crack the DaVinci Code. The American boyfriend is a neurotic, hypochondriacal New Yorker, very much in the Woody Allen mode, but Delpy breaks the stereotypes by making this hirsute, tattooed character an interior designer, which seems rather unlikely.

She also captures many telling details about each culture and films Paris as it really looks to people who live here. Stylistically, the film also works well, moving along at a fast clip, with clever narration from Delpy encapsulating the back story Amélie-style, with a quick succession of images.

Bravo to Delpy. I’ll look forward to her next directing effort.

Heidi Ellison

© 2007 Paris Update

More film reviews.

Reader Reaction: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to respond to this article (your response may be published on this page and is subject to editing).

Kathy Schobel writes: "I saw this film in the US earlier this year. This review depicts the film well. Julie Delpy is great. Just watch her credits at the end. I think she produced, wrote, directed, starred, composed and sang songs in the film and at the end. Plus the art in her film father’s gallery is actually some of his art. This film is fun on many levels."