Showing posts with label Romain Duris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romain Duris. Show all posts

REVIEW: DVD Release: Paris























Film: Paris
Release date: 2nd February 2009
Certificate: 15
Running time: 125 mins
Director: Cedric Klapisch
Starring: Juliette Binoche, Romain Duris, Fabrice Luchini, Albert Dupontel, Mélanie Laurent
Genre: Comedy/Drama/Romance
Studio: Optimum
Format: DVD
Country: France

César Award Nominee Cédric Klapisch pays homage to his home city in this 2008 ensemble feature, focusing on a diverse group of characters living in Paris. Klapisch intermittently observes and intertwines the lives of various inhabitants of the City of Love, and whilst illustrating an ever-unfulfilled society, ponders the motivations behind humanity’s desire to survive.

The film opens with and centres on Pierre (Romain Duris), a cabaret dancer who is told by his cardiologist that he will require a heart transplant if he is to have even a chance of surviving. Pierre’s heart condition leads him to reflect upon his life, his passions, and those transient moments which are so effortlessly taken for granted.

Refined to his apartment, Pierre observes the lives of the people wandering in the city below. It is this pastime which provokes Pierre to evaluate his own experiences, and to develop a true appreciation for those which made him feel the most happy and alive.

With his concerned sister, Élise (Juliette Binoche), caring for him, Pierre keeps himself occupied by watching those in the city below live their lives. When he is feeling up to it, Pierre takes walks outside, and crosses paths with those he has observed from above.

Inevitably, Pierre longs to dance, to run, and to make love to beautiful women as he once did. This regret and appetite for life leads him to encourage his sister to take more chances in life, rather than being so persistently pessimistic, like much of the Parisian society…


In a similar style to Paris Je t’aime, the film doesn’t purport that Paris is merely the city of romance, and proceed to spin its audience a clichéd yarn of happily ever after relationships. Instead, the film illustrates the different effects that love and sex can have on those involved, and analyses how different people approach the subject under different circumstances.

Klapisch is able to capture some of those rare moments which illustrate the frailty of human life, the beauty and the heart-ache of love, and the never sufficiently appreciated moments that pass us by too quickly. Nevertheless, Paris, much like the idealised city itself, and the often selfish and ignorant characters on display here, is beautiful but flawed.

There are some undeniably talented actors on display here, and the characters which they portray are worthy of far more screen time than can be afforded to them in one production. Indeed, some of the characters and sub-plots are so beguiling that Klapisch might have devoted a full script entirely to their cause.

Sadly, however, this is not the case, and Klapisch fails to develop upon any one character enough to leave viewers thoroughly satisfied, yet wanting more. Instead, the audience are left ever so slightly disappointed. Whether or not it is Klapisch’s intention to leave the audience, like many of his characters here, confused and unfulfilled, condensing the plots and saturating the number of characters would have been better avoided.

For instance, whilst being the focal point of the film, Pierre is not developed upon thoroughly enough for the audience to fully empathise with him and his changing perceptions towards life and people. It is evident that Pierre is a charismatic young man, and that he enjoyed his life as a cabaret dancer before his heart condition developed, but the fact that we see him so infrequently, and are given only a minor insight into his life, reduces the effect that his character should have on the audience.

This disassociation from Pierre is most evident in the closing scene, where Pierre appears almost resentful towards society for being so melancholic, and for not embracing life fully. The final words with which the audience are left are clearly intended to leave a lasting impression on the viewer, and yet the impact of this dialogue is diminished by our lack of understanding of Pierre, and how he lived his life prior to his illness. To Duris’ credit, he utilises his screen time well, and provides a convincing portrayal of a reflective young man, burdened with the fear of an imminent death. It is a shame, though, that his role is minimised by the inclusion of unnecessary excess characters.

Similarly, Elise (Binoche) serves as a further example of how Klapisch’s attempt to encompass such a broad scope of characters falls just short of the mark. Elise is a caring and selfless social worker, who despite her own problems at work and in her personal life, wants only to help her dying brother. Again, though, whilst the audience will certainly be grateful that Binoche’s natural beauty and captivating portrayal graces this production, they will undoubtedly be left with a sense of longing. The conclusion to Elise’s story, in particular, feels rushed and unconvincing, as if written merely as a convenient way to tie up some lose ends.


Roland Verneuil (Fabrice Luchini) is perhaps the most intriguing and complex character of all, and certainly the most bizarre. An expert in the history of Paris, teaching at the former University of Paris, Sorbonne, he becomes besotted by the young and beautiful Laetitia (Mélanie Laurent). This leads at first to panic attacks and a sudden change of job, quickly followed by an unlikely affair, which begins as a somewhat cringe-worthy and creepy stalking by Roland. This relationship sparks excitement in Roland, and causes him to act almost like a teenager, encountering his first love.

Again, though, this is a story that could be told all on its own, without the distracting interruptions of the other ongoing plots. Luchini, as with much of the cast, is a worthy addition to the production and certainly offers up many laughs and awkward moments, but it is his last dialogue that will impact most upon the audience.

It isn’t just the characters that suffer, however, as some of the peripheral subject matter of the film is too quickly brushed over. This lack of development of such topics ultimately means that they are put to the back of the viewer’s minds, and become almost pointless touching upon in the first place. For example, Khadija, a student of North African origin, takes a job working for a bigoted owner of a bakery, who nevertheless likes her for the simple reason that she works hard. This plot is barely developed at all, and would be better left for another project, rather than diverting away from the more prominent storylines.

Similarly, the story of Benoit (Kingsley Kum Abang), a resort worker in Cameroon, seems to have been thrown in only as an afterthought by Klapisch. Benoit is a somewhat misguided man who risks his life crossing the Straights of Gibraltar in an attempt to reach his brother, and a beautiful acquaintance, in Paris. Unfortunately, this rather serious and harrowing subject matter is turned into an almost redundant storyline, as it is thrown into the caldron of plots and picked out on too few occasions to have any real impact on the audience.

The splendid views of Paris and the inclusion of such tourist highlights as the Sacre Coeur, the Eiffel Tower and the Bastille are aesthetically beautiful, but occasionally make this feel like an advertisement for the city, pieced together by the Office du Tourisme. Like Woody Allen’s Manhattan, there’s a seeming intention to draw people to the city, as well as to provoke nostalgia, and remind those already living there why it is so romanticised. Klapisch, however, does not reach the same heights or achieve the same outcome as Allen did with Manhattan, nor which Klapisch himself has done in the past with films such as When the Cat’s Away or Russian Dolls.

Despite the film’s shortfalls, however, the audience will ultimately be rewarded for taking the time to view what is on offer. The film doesn’t apologise for sending out a clichéd message, and this is evident from the opening credits. Wax Taylor’s ‘Seize The Day’ is played to set the tone for the movie, and this carpe diem theme is wholly embraced and continued through to the film’s conclusion. The lyrics are echoed to the audience in the final scene and closing credits, leaving the audience with a familiar, but important message.


Paris is a film which offers nothing new in terms of its cardinal message to the audience, and certainly it suffers for its attempt to abbreviate the stories of too many fascinating characters into one sitting. Yet, there are some genuinely funny, bizarre and heartfelt moments to be shared here, and with the aid of some polished performances from a beautifully diverse cast, the audience could almost be forgiven for casting a shadow over the movie’s faults. TMO

REVIEW: DVD Release: Heartbreaker























Film: Heartbreaker
Release date: 22nd November 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 105 mins
Director: Pascal Chaumeil
Starring: Romain Duris, Vanessa Paradis, Julie Ferrier, François Damiens, Héléna Noguerra
Genre: Comedy/Romance
Studio: Revolver
Format: Cinema
Country: France

Most Hollywood romantic comedies manage to be about as funny as having a tooth pulled with a pair of rusty pliers and as romantic as a Valentine's Day card written by accountants, but French director Pascal Chaumeil's debut feature is a breath of fresh air: stylish, witty, and with a romantic streak that is sweetly endearing, not sickly. Heartbreaker may not rewrite the rom com rulebook, but it's certainly a cut above the norm.

Alex Lippi (Romain Duris) is a disreputable womaniser, but he’s a disreputable womaniser with a difference: along with his resourceful sister Melanie (Julie Ferrier) and unconventional brother-in-law Marc (Francois Damiens), Alex runs a business that tasks itself with getting women to split from unsuitable partners.

Alex doesn’t have sex with any of the women he charms, and he refuses to intervene if both partners are genuinely happy in their relationship, but his professional ethics don’t stop him from doing whatever else it takes to get the job done - whether it’s getting arrested or masquerading as a teary-eyed humanitarian do-gooder.

Alex, however, is about to find himself firmly out of his comfort zone. Faced with a large debt that threatens the existence of his business, and possibly even his life, he accepts a job he would normally turn down from a wealthy flower merchant with apparently shady connections. The client’s daughter, high-flying wine expert Juliette (Vanessa Paradis), is seemingly perfectly in love and set on marrying wealthy English philanthropist Jonathan in glamorous Monaco in a mere ten days.

With no time to lose, Alex, Melanie and Marc head off to Monaco, where Alex poses as a bodyguard employed to protect Juliette by her concerned father. Under normal circumstances, Alex would not have to do much more than fake a few tears and feign a shared interest or two, but as he soon discovers, Juliette is no pushover…


The basic premise of Heartbreaker is utterly ridiculous, of course, but that’s probably one of the main reasons why Chaumeil and his cast have such fun with it, and pull off it so well. While Alex is clearly a fine looking man with a stereotypically Gallic je ne sais quoi, he’s also, as Juliette points out to him, a bit of a moron, and the spy team antics of Melanie and Marc veer from the implausible to the hilariously farcical. Rather than trying to limit the absurd nature of the plot, Chaumeil revels in it, and layers one screwball idea on top of another, sometimes with joyously amusing results.

In one of the film’s funniest scenes, but not its most politically correct, Marc disguises himself (not very well) as a bumbling Polish labourer whose inept attempts to fix the faulty air conditioning unit in Juliette’s hotel room lead very quickly and deliberately to complete disaster, with the desired result that she has to spend the night in Alex’s room (her on the bed, him on the couch).

The arrival of Juliette’s old friend Sophie, a sexually voracious free spirit, further complicates Alex’s task, but she is also a jarring reminder to Juliette that her life was very different, and a lot more exciting before she settled down with the tediously wet and teeth-gratingly well meaning Jonathan (Andrew Lincoln). At this point, it begins to become more obvious that Juliette and Jonathan’s relationship is not the stuff of rom com heaven, but when Jonathan finally arrives in Monaco, it looks as though as the game is up and Alex has to accept defeat.

Inevitably, perhaps, this is where Heartbreaker has to start playing it a little more straight, and where Alex has to complete the transition from smooth conman to genuinely smitten would-be love interest. Having already played his trump cards (involving a professed love of George Michael, Dirty Dancing and Roquefort cheese for breakfast), Alex has to improvise, and rely on a little good fortune to get the girl.

Fortunately, Chaumeil is a skilled enough director to manage doing this without completely upsetting the balance of the film, and you’d have to be a hopeless misanthrope not to enjoy the way Heartbreaker concludes. Even if you do find the ending a touch syrupy, or aren’t quite convinced by the chemistry, or lack thereof between Duris and Paradis, there is a brilliant, laugh-out-loud final scene, played out over the closing credits, where we see Marc attempting to take over Alex’s role as seducer for hire.

Apparently there is already a US remake in the works, but no doubt it’ll be as bad, if nowhere near as funny, as Marc’s attempts to follow in Alex’s footsteps.


In many ways, Heartbreaker is a thoroughly conventional rom com, and an ideal date movie for the unadventurous, but director Pascal Chaumeil is clearly a new talent who knows how to make something ordinary a little out of the ordinary. JG


REVIEW: DVD Release: The Beat That My Heart Skipped























Film: The Beat That My Heart Skipped
Release date: 27th March 2006
Certificate: 15
Running time: 102 mins
Director: Jacques Audiard
Starring: Romain Duris, Neils Arestrup, Jonathan Zaccai, Gilles Cohen, Linh Dan Pham
Genre: Action/Crime/Drama/Romance/Thriller
Studio: Artificial Eye
Format: DVD
Country: France

Jaques Audiard recently stunned audiences with hard-hitting prison drama A Prophet, which has made him a very celebrated name in European cinema. He won a BAFTA for the film but it was not his first, Audiard got his first nod from the British Academy in 2005 with crime drama The Beat That My Heart Skipped. With a string of Cesar awards also, and the inclusion of rising star Romain Duris, this is not just about crime and punishment, it’s about the music, too.

28-year-old Tom Seyr is a forceful and foul tempered real estate broker. He lives alone, and is growing weary of his day to day crooked dealings; his work sees him planting rats in rival buildings, cutting corners on housing regulations and intimidating squatters out of his buildings. He works with like minded thugs Fabrice and Sami, but his roots in the business lie firmly with his low-life father Robert. As a son, Tom is overly-protective of his dad, and does him favours and collects his debts against his better judgement.

Tom’s departed mother was a concert pianist, and one evening he crosses paths with a former associate of hers, where he is offered the chance of an audition - the chance to re-live his childhood passion of playing music. Unsure at first, Tom balances business and pleasure, enlisting the tutelage of Miao Lin to help him prepare for a musical step up. She is a musical student and prodigy, and offers to teach Tom despite her inability to speak French. He begins to grow as a performer.

As Tom becomes more engrossed in his music, he becomes more disenchanted with his tainted occupation. Having previously covered for partner Fabrice’s infidelities, he begins an affair with his wife Aline. Things even more complicated when Robert begins to attract attention from a notorious Russian gangster, and with the audition coming in the very near future, Tom needs to decide where his priorities lie...


Audiard installs the realism here that went on to feature so prominently in A Prophet. He maintains a balance between the action and the mundane that allows us to feel the strain of Tom’s story, and all the sub-plots it diverts into. It also installs a sense of unease that is felt in all manner of situations, from Tom’s jumbled earlier piano practises to when he is seen tearing apart a guy in a bar fight. The origins of the constant menace of A Prophet is seen here with a dynamic that caters for sudden bursts of violence, musical interludes and afternoon cups of coffee in equal measure.

Another winning Audiard-esque quality is his ability to attract intensely talented young men as his protagonists. Recently we have seen Tahar Rahim as Malik, Vincent Cassel as Paul in Read My Lips, and here we have Romian Duris. Duris plays the part with hard-faced petulance - from the moment we see him he is an animated sight, twisting a lighter in his hand, with his face a frowning picture of unease. The focus of the story is a character study of Tom, and we see in Duris a range that allows this to become the most relevant issue to the audience.

2001’s Read My Lips featured a central relationship between Vincent Cassell and Emmanuelle Devos as a man and woman who form a relationship despite one of them being near deaf. A similar relationship is seen between Tom and Miao Lin, she can only speak Cantonese, Vietnamese and some English, yet their connection is one of the most heartfelt of the story. A scene in which we see Tom prompting his teacher to speak French with kitchen appliances is truly touching, and creates further empathy for Tom. Audiard again places a great emphasis on the altered ways that people connect; in this instance, music becomes the language that allows the two to understand each other.

Frustration can be found in the stories narrative. Tom’s life contrasts the ugliness of his job with the beauty of his music, and this personal battle does leave some things unresolved. Audiard complicates both sides of Tom’s life, but we never get to see him choose between the two. However, the realism and tone of the story does prevent any sort of happy ending from seeming out of place, and, in truth, there is some satisfaction felt with Tom’s final act of violence. Perhaps the way some things teeter out or drag on is all too honest of life.

Some mention should go to Niels Arestup. The actor, who went on to captivate audiences as bulldoggish mob boss Cesar in A Prophet, shows why Audiard thinks so highly of him. As Tom’s dad Richard, he transforms himself into an overbearing and toxic influence on Tom’s life.


This is a fine example of why Jaques Audiard is such a special talent. He features his mix of compelling characters, dominant realism and stunning violence to harrowingly portray the absorbing underbelly of Parisian life. Expect to see lots more of Romain Duris also after a performance that serves as a call card for his budding ability. All those who saw A Prophet and loved it are urged to jump on the Audiard bandwagon immediately. LW


NEWS: DVD Release: Heartbreaker
















Few romantic comedies in the last decade have even come close to the gates of the rom-com hall of fame, let alone entered them. Heartbreaker has all the elements and more to become an all-time classic in its genre: originality, wit and, above all, breathtaking romance.

Taking a staggering 1.7 million admissions in its French opening weekend and in the UK Top 10 chart for several weeks, the film marks director Pascal Chaumeil’s feature debut, and stars the gorgeous paring of Vanessa Paradis and Romain Duris.

Alex (Duris) is a charming, funny, effortlessly cool, and, most importantly, irresistible to women. He offers a professional service; to break up relationships. In just a few weeks, for a fee equivalent to his reputation, he promises to transform any husband, fiancé or boyfriend into an ex. Hideouts, phone-tapping, fake identities, a devastating smile, anything goes when it comes to fulfilling his contract.

Juliette (Paradis) is a young, beautiful, free-spirited and independent heiress, with a passion for shopping, fine wine, and a word-perfect knowledge of Dirty Dancing. In ten days, she’s due to marry the man of her dreams (Lincoln), much to her father’s disapproval.

When Alex is hired to break up this seemingly perfect couple, he is thrown into an action-filled race against time. Taking him through the sun-drenched streets of Paris to the fast cars and high fashion of Monaco, in his own hilarious seduction ‘mission impossible’ that risks him being caught by his ruthless personal creditors, angry exes, and Juliette herself. But worst of all, will he discover at his own cost that when it comes to love, the perfect plan doesn’t exist?


Film: Heartbreaker
Release date: 22nd November 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 105 mins
Director: Pascal Chaumeil
Starring: Romain Duris, Vanessa Paradis, Julie Ferrier, François Damiens, Héléna Noguerra
Genre: Comedy/Romance
Studio: Revolver
Format: Cinema
Country: France

REVIEW: DVD Release: Pot Luck























Film: Pot Luck
Release date: 25th October 2004
Certificate: 15
Running time: 135 mins
Director: Cedric Klapisch
Starring: Romain Duris, Judith Godreche, Audrey Tautou, Cecile De France, Kelly Reilly
Genre: Comedy/Romance/Drama
Studio: Cinefile
Format: DVD
Country: France/Spain

When you’re a recent graduate in the prime of your life, settling down with that special someone and devoting yourself to the monotony of a nine to five is not particularly appealing. So what do you do when faced with such a bleak reality? Move to Spain, of course!

Overwhelmed by the expectations everyone else has for him, Xavier (Romain Duris) finds himself confused and frustrated by his life. With a father pushing him through every door he can possibly open to kick start his career, and a mother who is afraid of letting go of her little boy, a change of scenery may not be a bad idea. What starts out as a tediously necessary study year in Barcelona turns into an exhilarating, self exploratory learning curve.

Floundering in unknown territory, a coincidental run in with French newly weds Anne-Sophie (Judith Godrèche) and Jean-Michel (Xavier De Guillebon) provides Xavier with a lot more than the sanctuary he initially turns to them for.

Dissatisfied with his relationship with manipulative girlfriend Martine (Audrey Tautou), Xavier persuades himself that the distance between them is reason enough to strike up an affair with the desperately lonely Anne-Sophie. Enough excitement for most, this is just the tip of the iceberg for Xavier, who finds himself sharing an apartment with six other students from all over Europe.

Back at the shared apartment, or L’auberge Espagnole, to use the film’s original title, the life Xavier has forged with his flatmates acts more like a catalyst for their spontaneous behaviour, as opposed to the reality check he is craving with regard to his forbidden lover...


Writer and director Cédric Klapisch has taken the angle of light-hearted student drama in his stride with this offering, which is as charming as it is multicultural. Klapisch subtly draws on the subject of European integration, throwing together seven beautiful young people into the same apartment in the name of education on a budget. Along with French Xavier is Belgian Isabelle (Cécile de France, who won the César Award for Most Promising Actress for the role), uptight Brit Wendy (Kelly Reilly), Lars (Christian Pagh) from Denmark, Italian Alessandro (Federico D’Anna), German Tobias (Barnaby Metschurat), and the only native Spaniard, Soledad (Christina Brondo).

Thankfully, the film avoids stereotyped characterisation to drive the narrative of the flatmates’ struggle to coexist in a foreign country, with limited communicative skills alongside their ongoing studies. Instead, and to the credit of Klapisch, the European stereotypes are provided by Wendy’s visiting brother William (Kevin Bishop). Encapsulating the typical ‘Brit abroad’, William manages to upset and get under the feet of everybody in the house within a matter of days. Obliviously insulting with every word he utters, William is slowly accepted by the group, joining them for the rest of shenanigans. At first, it seems that William is merely there to add to the already overflowing pool of eye candy, and the occasional cheap laugh, but his purpose becomes clear as he befriends the others. His initiation period in the house serves to explain and visualise the lessons each of the housemates have had to learn about tolerance and compromise in order to get to their state of discordantly affectionate harmony.

Surprisingly, the diverse ensemble cast isn’t overkill and the group work well together. While there is clearly some talent in the form of Duris, Reilly, De France and Bishop, the addition of Tautou seems unnecessary. Although her character is central to Xavier’s decisions, remaining an important factor in his life right to the very end, the film does not gain anything by having such an internationally well-known actress in that role.

Despite so many languages being featured, Klapisch reminds the audience that this is a French production with Xavier’s narration, which keeps the audience in the loop with his point of view. A device which reinforces the fact that this story is essentially about the growth of Xavier and his journey - the narration would not have been missed.

Stylistically, it is simple but effective. Scenes of bureaucracy are sped up in an attempt to signal Xavier’s indignation with the guidelines he has to follow in order to succeed, while scenes of enjoyment are slowed down and repeated, signalling Xavier’s desire to prolong them.


French cinema for beginners, Pot Luck eases even the most apprehensive viewer into a comfortable balance of reading the subtitles and feasting on the visual simplicity of modest world cinema. Easy on the eye and the mind, it is endearing through and through, even when it shouldn’t be. JHA