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Arts and Culture

‘Midnight in Paris’: Tripping the City of Light Fantastic

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Posted on May 20, 2011
imdb.com

Owen Wilson and Rachel McAdams go in for the kiss in “Midnight in Paris.”

By Richard Schickel

Gil (Owen Wilson) is lolling on some steps in Paris, contemplating his moderately unhappy fate—he’s a screenwriter who thinks he should be a novelist, he’s engaged to a rich bitch (Rachel McAdams) who does not share his artistic ambitions or his desire to realize them in the French capital—when an antique automobile pulls up and no less than F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda invite him to join them. In, as it happens, the 1920s, in the City of Light. Soon enough he’s involved with Hemingway and Gertrude Stein, Salvador Dali and just about everyone who was anyone in the dear, dead days. (T.S. Eliot is not seen, but he is heard introducing himself from the cab that returns for Gil every midnight.) There is, of course, an utterly fetching young woman (Marion Cotillard) who sleeps with all the great painters but indicates something more than a passing fancy for Gil.

Over the years, Woody Allen has occasionally resorted to his version of magical realism—the great example being, to my mind at least, “The Purple Rose of Cairo”—and though not many critics have noticed this, it’s a realm that’s extraordinarily well-suited to a man not entirely enamored of the contemporary quotidian. If he can send his characters flying through time and space, they can escape that oppressive reality. And the obligation to crack wise. The very peculiar circumstances in which Allen places them can, in effect, do their comedic talking for them.

That’s not to say that Allen is above having some fun with the historical figures so richly populating “Midnight in Paris.” Hemingway, for example, always talks in short, portentous sentences. Stein appears sans Alice B. Toklas but full of motherly spirits. And when screenwriter Gil spitballs an idea for a movie to Luis Buñuel, the director does not understand the idea behind what would one day become “The Exterminating Angel.” He thinks the thing just sounds preposterous.

This is a very relaxed, yet often rather subtle film—it opens, for example, with a lovely montage of postcard views of Paris (no dialogue, no characters, just some underscoring—which is not as quite the geographic love letter that it first appears to be. The sequence is shot entirely under gray or rainy skies, hinting at a touch of darkness in the fantasy that is about to unfold. And as the friend of mine who joined me at the screening observed, the film offers no hint at the tragedies that would eventually overtake the lives of most of the historical figures Gil encounters. For the purposes of this film—and Gil’s education—they must be perpetually young and promising and full of hope—the better to inspire the writer to make his break with Hollywood and his fiancée and all the other predictable life expectations that threaten to drown his often rubbery spirit.

I like the way Allen induces us in his fantasy to suspend our disbelief. Over the years he has become—again, this is not something people seem to notice—a master filmmaker. The sinuousness of his camera, the intricate ways he groups people before it, the subtle inevitability of the way his editing carries us to unexpected places, bespeaks an un-prepossessing film artistry that simply refuses to toot its own horn.

At the end of the film, Allen cuts Gil a very nice and unexpected romantic break, which, of course I’m not going to betray—except to say that it involves rain, in which the writer, alone of the film’s modern characters, loves walking. It’s like a scrim that softens the outlines of our not-so-wonderful modern world that intrudes even on Paris.

I don’t suppose “Midnight in Paris” is a “major” film (whatever that means) or even a “major“ Woody Allen movie (ditto). There is something a little too repetitive in its structure—the constant reappearance of Gil’s transporting transportation does get a little stale eventually—but Allen is not as enamored by nostalgia as he superficially seems to be. It certainly informs Gil’s sensibility, without, finally, dominating it (that way lies the mild madness of people who devote themselves to the obsessive collection of old comic books). The message here—and Gil finally states it quite explicitly—is that we can permit memory to color our thoughts, but not to distort or fully claim them.

But let’s not dwell too heavily on that point. What this movie most significantly offers us is the relaxed confidence of a director at the top of his game, inviting us to join him at his play. There was a time when films like this were among the common delights of moviegoing. It’s a measure of the medium’s romantic and comedic decline that this film seems such a treasurable rarity nowadays.

Oh, and finally, this celebrity footnote: As was widely reported, Carla Bruni, France’s unofficial first lady, is in the film, which makes no fuss about her presence. She’s just a pretty woman quietly going about her business, just like everyone else present. I guess I forgot to mention that, among his other virtues, Woody’s awfully good with actors, too.

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By Inherit The Wind, May 29, 2011 at 1:20 pm Link to this comment

EmileZ, May 26 at 2:52 am Link to this comment

@ Inherit The Wind

I think whether or not Woody Allen has anything new to say is unimportant.
****

It is to me.  Even if all he has to say is “Have a good belly laugh!”

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EmileZ's avatar

By EmileZ, May 26, 2011 at 3:53 pm Link to this comment

Don’t Ge 2 Close 2 My Fantasy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MON2HL02mec

by Ween

(sorry)

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EmileZ's avatar

By EmileZ, May 26, 2011 at 4:37 am Link to this comment

One more thing…

Since “the Purple Rose Of Cairo” Woody Allen seems to have had a policy (I haven’t seen Midnight In Paris yet) of having the character who lives in a fantasy world “win” so to speak. He also examines other peoples fantasy worlds that crash. This seems to be a dominant theme nowadays.

Ok I could have out it better but I really wanted to say…


It would be interesting to see a Woody Allen version of what Roman Polanski did so well in “Rosemary’s Baby” and “The Tenant” (not “Fearless Vampire Killers” though his take on vampires might also be amusing. After all vampires are all the rage).

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EmileZ's avatar

By EmileZ, May 26, 2011 at 1:52 am Link to this comment

@ Inherit The Wind

I think whether or not Woody Allen has anything new to say is unimportant.

He can always recycle old themes as he successfully did in “Match Point”.

Also, I think he has made many good films since the mid-eighties, and hope he continues to do so.

And… I would take a Woody Allen film any day over such fare as “Elegy”, “Thor”, or “The Lincoln Lawyer”.

P.S. I agree Vickiblahblah wasn’t his best.

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By Inherit The Wind, May 25, 2011 at 2:47 am Link to this comment

I thought Purple Rose was Allen’s last good movie.  But this sound like Purple Rose meets Vicky, Christina, Barcelona, which I thought was a horrible, stupid movie that wasted fine actors and gave Penelope Cruz a role as nothing more than a stereotypical hot-blooded Carmen exaggeration, forcing a fine actress into a pathetic stupid role.

Does Allen actually have anything left to say?

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EmileZ's avatar

By EmileZ, May 24, 2011 at 2:00 am Link to this comment

“The Purple Rose Of Cairo” and “Love And Death” are probably my favorites.

I will certainly see this one. I see them all. I don’t expect much anymore.

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By Night-Gaunt, May 23, 2011 at 12:22 pm Link to this comment

What with all the people of color in European films since the 1920’s?!!!

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By Cladrite Radio, May 23, 2011 at 11:11 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Alice B. Toklas is depicted in the movie—she greets Gil and Co. at the front door when first they call on Gertrude Stein.

I never quite bought Gil as a character or Wilson in his portrayal of him. Gil admits that he flunked freshman English and has devoted his life to cranking Hollywood tripe, but Prufrock is his mantra, as he claims when meeting T.S. Eliot? There was no clear sense of how he came to be as familiar with the literary and artistic greats he mooned over (and finally got to meet) as we’re asked to believe he is. Most of Allen’s audience is familiar with them, of course, but how did Gil come to know them so well?

I’d have believed Gil more with another actor playing him—Owen Wilson has spent his artistic and intellectual capital with the string of dopey comedies he’s been appearing in for years, and just wasn’t believable playing a (relative) grownup. John Cusack, who’s worked with Allen before, would have been a better choice, or Paul Giamatti (if Allen could bear to have his movie peopled with less attractive actors). Even the other Wilson brother, Luke, would have been a better choice than Owen.

Rachel McAdams was also problematic, but her character was so one-note and thankless, I’m not sure there was much more to be done with it than she managed to achieve.

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By Egomet Bonmot, May 23, 2011 at 2:17 am Link to this comment

I’ve always suspected Woody Allen started making European films when his American backers said they’d no longer sponsor films without black people in them.  Rather than capitulate he left the country.

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By Lafayette, May 21, 2011 at 7:37 am Link to this comment

Can’t imagine what Carla did to get this part. But it was announced this week that she is pregnant.

Naughty me ... ;^)

No, I do not mean to besmirch Carla who is not only an attractive woman but a delightful one. If she could make Nicholas Sarkozy walk a straight line in French politics, then she is also a magician.

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