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Format: DVD Aug 2009 Not Rated Recording Mode: (unknown) 115 min. Color UPC: 065935826149 |
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Details

Movie Description French writer-director Christophe Barratier follows up his nuanced period-drama, THE CHORUS (2004), with this feature about obsessive love and the behind-the-scenes machinations of a prewar Parisian music hall. The year is 1936, and on the outskirts of the French capital the workers of the Chansonia theater look for a way to reopen their former workplace following its inglorious demise. Barratier’s film follows former Chansonia stagehand Pigoil (Gérard Jugnot) as he attempts to reopen the theater while fighting off some devastating personal losses. Pigoil hits paydirt when he unearths the radiant singer Douce (Nora Arnezeder), but a battle for her heart between the morally repugnant new boss of the theater, Galapiat (played by Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu), and the handsome electrician, Milou (Clovis Cornillac), threatens to quash the Chansonia’s sudden upswing.
Barratier’s zippy camerawork and impressive attention to period detail are reminiscent of Coen brothers films such as MILLER’S CROSSING (1990) and THE HUDSUCKER PROXY (1994). Cinematographer Tom Stern deserves credit for giving PARIS 36 much of its visual flair, and the collected cast members strike a fine balance between funny and sad throughout. Numerous references to classic musicals come thick and fast as Barratier’s film unfolds, and the song-and-dance numbers make a neat counterpoint to the often-harrowing offstage drama. Jugnot is especially impressive as the beleaguered Pigoil, and Arnezeder, with just a handful of prior screen appearances to her name, is a joy to watch. Barratier cleverly mixes in some of the tumultuous political sentiment of the era by starkly contrasting the leftist workers of the Chansonia with the right-wing leanings of Galapiat and his merciless cronies, helping to make PARIS 36 a heady and often deeply amusing snapshot of an era.
Industry Reviews 3 stars out of 5 -- "[A] solid, well-played and unabashedly sentimental '30s-set music-hall melodrama..." Total Film - Kate Stables (02/01/2009)
4 stars out of 5 -- "[T]his is as much an evocation of an era as nostalgic entertainment, and Jean Rabasse's designs, Tom Stern's photography and Reinhardt Wagner's score are as exemplary as Christophe Barratier's direction." Empire - David Parkinson (03/01/2009)
"[A]n irresistible and impeccable period musical set against the political and economic turmoil of France in the mid-'30s....PARIS 36 has a beguilingly authentic sound and offers a blend of impassioned sentiment and harsh, even brutal grit." Los Angeles Times - Kevin Thomas (04/03/2009)
"[I]f taken in the right spirit, enjoyable....It's pleasant and amusing." Chicago Sun-Times - Roger Ebert (04/09/2009)
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