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Photo of the Week

Paris Update Centre Pompidou esplanade darren Palmer

In front of the Centre Pompidou: one crash-proof, the other already crashed. Photo © Darren Palmer of Paris by Photo.

 

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).

play Chartre en Lumières

> The town of Chartres illuminates its monuments and the cathedral with colorful light installations. Through Sept. 15.

play Festival de l'Imaginaire

> Performances by troupes from around the world, Maison des Cultures du Monde, Paris, through June 17.

play Festival de Saint Denis

> Music festival featuring both stars like Sir Colin Davis and young talents; ends with a dawn performance by horse whisperer Bartabas and oud player Mehdi Haddab, Cathedral and Legion of Honor, Saint Denis, through June 30.

play Festival Extensions

> Concerts, dance, films and more, various locations, Paris and Val de Marne, through May 31.

play Festival International des Jardins de Chaumont-sur-Loire

>"Gardens of delights, gardens of delirium" is the theme of this year's garden festival, Chaumont-sur-Loire, through Oct. 21.

play Festival Jazz à Saint-Germain-des-Prés

>Jazz acts ranging from amateur to big names like Ahmad Jamal and Yusef Lateef (together). Various locations, Paris, Through June 3.

play Festival l’Afrique dans tous les Sens 2012

>A celebration of African music, film, art, fashion, dance, cuisine and more, various locations, Paris, through May 27.

play Quinzaine des Réalisateurs

>The features and short subjects entered in this category at the Cannes Film Festival shown in Paris, Forum des Images, Paris, May 31-June 10

play Salon d'Art Contemporain de Montrouge

>57th annual festival of contemporary art featuring 80 up-and-coming artists, La Villette, Montrouge, through May 30.

 

Film - Comedy

 

Parlez-moi de la Pluie

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Breaking Down Barriers

parlez moi de la pluie
Michel (Jean-Pierre Bacri) and Agnès (Agnès Jaoui) get down with the ants.

After the glorious Le Goût des Autres and the disappointing Comme une Image, I waited with nervous anticipation for the opening of Parlez-moi de la Pluie (Let It Rain is the less poetic official English title), Agnès Jaoui’s third film co-written with and co-starring Jean-Pierre Bacri.

Jaoui plays the part of Agnès Villanova, a well-known feminist writer who has decided to launch a political career by traveling to her native Lubéron in the south of France for a political rally during an atypically rainy summer.

While she is there, she visits the family home, where her younger sister (played by Pascale Arbillot), who still harbors resentments about the way their recently deceased mother favored her older, more ambitious sister, is staying with her husband and children. A local journalist, Michel Ronsard (Bacri), and his sidekick, Karim (Jamel Debbouze), a hotel night porter, decide to take the opportunity to make a documentary about Agnès, the only well-known person with whom they have ever had contact. The movie is punctuated by the amateurish attempts at filmmaking of Michel (whose only claim to fame is a previous documentary on bullfighting filmed “from the bull’s perspective”) and Karim.

As one might expect from Jaoui and Bacri, the dialogue is sparkling and witty. An extraordinary number of different strands are deftly woven together, even though some minor characters, such as Karim’s wife and Agnès’s partner, inevitably remain underdeveloped.

Bacri in particular lights up the screen with his charm and comic timing. Although his part does not allow him to give as nuanced a performance as he did in Le Goût des Autres, he still manages to elicit pathos without ever being mawkish in his relationship with his son, who chooses to go away with a friend during his vacation rather than spend it following his father’s documentary-making exploits.

While Jaoui and Bacri, who are real-life partners, seem to enjoy playing roles in which they are not romantically linked, the scenes with the two of them together are frequently the most successful. One moment in particular, when the two are studying the activities of an ant on the ground while they wait for Karim to arrive, is both hilarious and poignant. Other scenes, set in the deepest countryside, come uncomfortably close to the rather less-subtle charms of the film Bienvenue chez les Ch’tis, but even they are saved by the excellent performances by the protagonists.

Jaoui and Bacri prefer to write screenplays that are issue-driven, which can have varying success. Whereas the study of people’s snobbery and prejudices was deftly and movingly handled in Le Goût des Autres, Comme une Image seemed to amount to little more than the message that fat girls have feelings, too. In Parlez-moi de la Pluie, the discussions about feminism and racism lack subtlety at times, and it perhaps reflects negatively on modern French society that filmmakers still feel the need to be didactic about such issues.

Much of the film revolves around breaking down barriers of expectation and prejudice, so it is somewhat disappointing that the film ends rather too neatly and conventionally for my liking. I’d gladly take just two minutes of the excellent screenplay and Bacri’s brilliance, however, over the interminable hours of cinematic tosh that seems to be churned out all too frequently these days (mini-rant now over!).

James Gascoigne

© 2008 Paris Update

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