ur_inner_child
.%$^!@&^#(*!?.%$^?!.
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2004
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- 2004
Twenty filmmakers from a incredibly variety of styles and genres come together to have their own five minutes of freedom. The producers use these twenty films and create some narrative overall. It doesn't sound all to disjunct and awkward, if you could be bothered reading imdb's explanation at the very bottom.
For now, here's the trailer. The trailer reminds me of "Love Actually", but i know it'll probably be far from it.
I couldn't be bothered doing them all, but...
Directors:
Gurinder Chadha (Bride & Prejudice)
Sylvain Chomet (The Illusionist)
Ethan Coen (O Brother, Where Art Thou)
Isabel Coixet (The Secret Life of Words)
Wes Craven (The Hills Have Eyes, Red Eye, Scream (1,2&3))
Alfonso Cuarón (Great Expectations)
Christopher Doyle (Lady in the Water)
Richard LaGravenese (The Horse Whisperer)
Vincenzo Natali (Earth Final Conflict)
Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run)
Gus Van Sant (Psycho, Good Will Hunting, Elephant, To Die For)
And the cast:
Natalie Portman
Elijah Wood
Maggie Gyllenhaal
Steve Buscemi
Catalina Sandino Moreno (Fast Food Nation)
Willem Dafoe (Green Goblin from Spiderman 2)
Gena Rowlands (Old Allie from The Notebook)
Barbet Schroeder (Mars Attacks!)
Miranda Richardson (Phanton of the Opera)
Emily Mortimer (Match Point)
Leonor Watling
Juliette Binoche
Nick Nolte
(plus more)
*nags like a little girl*imdb.com said:Paris, je t'aime is about the plurality of cinema in one mythic location: Paris, the City of Love. Twenty filmmakers will bring their own personal touch, underlining the wide variety of styles, genres, encounters and the various atmospheres and lifestyles that prevail in the neighborhoods of Paris. Each director has been given five minutes of freedom, and we, as producers, carry the responsibility of weaving a single narrative unit out of those twenty moments.
The 20 films will not appear in the order of the arrondissements, from one to twenty, but rather, in a pertinent narrative order, initially unknown to the audience. They will be fused together by transitional interstitial sequences, and also via the introduction and epilogue sequences of the feature film. Each transition will begin with the last shot of the previous film and will end with the first shot of the following film, and will have a threefold function: 1) The first is to extend the enchantment and the emotion of the previous segment, 2) The second is to prepare the audience for the surprise of the next segment, and 3) The third is to provide a general, comfortable and cohesive atmosphere to the feature film. The delightful and brief interludes of these transitions will enable the viewer to slide from one world to the next, featuring a recurring and unexpected character. This mysterious character is a witness to the Parisian life and helps create a continuous narration. It appears both in and in-between the films. In addition to the information these transitions will provide about the city and its people, their tone will be intentionally light often referring to famous scenes easily attributed to the history of Paris cinema. Similar specifications will be followed by the composer who will supervise the musical fusion between the films and the transitions as he creates the musical score of Paris, je t'aime.
Considering the common theme of Paris and Love, the fusion between the films and the transitions, the fast pace of a fluid and complete storytelling, Paris, je t'aime will not be just another "anthology" picture. It will be a unique collective feature film that will constitute a two-hour cinematographic spectacle whose original structure will make for a dramatically different experience for its global audience.
I want to see it! I don't have the greatest of expectations, but I'm highly curious about it!
It's out now.