Diane Lane is married to Alec Baldwin, a successful movie producer. They have a successful marriage and a daughter in her second semester at college. They are at Cannes when word comes that a movie in Budapest needs him on the scene. When Miss Lane's ear infection makes the pilot ground her, they agree she will meet her husband in Paris; his European partner, Arnaud Viard, is driving there anyway, and will take her. So, with misgivings about leaving his wife in the hands of a single Frenchman, Baldwin is out of the movie (except for a few phone calls) and Lane & Viard are off on a road trip. Of course, Viard offers a Cook's Tour of the regions they are passing through, complete with Roman remnants and far more food than anyone can eat, the perfect wines to accompany the food, and remain as photogenic as these two.
It's a chick flick, pure and simple, meant for middle-aged and older women. The food is photogenic (Miss Lane takes photos that would grace the pages of BON APPETIT) and everyone knows Viard, including the manageress of the Lumiere Museum in Lyon. It's a movie about the glories of French Cuisine and Diane Lane, and if it remains PG-rated at all times, there is the offer of a meeting at a well-known clam bar in San Francisco and a jaunt up the Californian coast and Miss Lane staring thoughtfully into the camera after Viard has left.
The director is Eleanor Coppola, the wife of Francis Ford Coppola (it's an American Zoetrope production) and if she waited until she was 80 to make her feature film debut, it makes one wonder how autobiographical a trifle (to borrow a cooking term from another cuisine) this pleasant, minor film is.
Paris Can Wait
2016
Action / Comedy / Drama / Romance
Paris Can Wait
2016
Action / Comedy / Drama / Romance
Plot summary
Anne is at a crossroads in her life. Long married to a successful, driven but inattentive movie producer, she unexpectedly finds herself taking a car trip from Cannes to Paris with a business associate of her husband. What should be a seven-hour drive turns into a carefree two-day adventure replete with diversions involving picturesque sights, fine food and wine, humor, wisdom and romance, reawakening Anne's senses and giving her a new lust for life.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Great Food, Great Countryside, So What's the Hurry?
A trip though the French countryside
A very slow, sweet, ultimately uninvolving film written and directed by Eleanor Coppola, wife of Francis Ford Coppola, is given its best chance for survival by the presence of the always reliable and lovely Diane Lane.
The story - 'The wife of a successful movie producer takes a car trip from the south of France to Paris with one of her husband's associates.' Or to be more complete, 'Anne Diane Lane) is at a crossroads in her life. Long married to successful, workaholic and driven but inattentive movie producer Michael (Alec Baldwin),she unexpectedly finds herself taking a car trip from Cannes to Paris with Jacques Clement (Arnaud Viard),a business associate of her husband. What should be a seven-hour drive turns into a carefree two-day adventure replete with diversions involving picturesque sights, fine food and wine, humor, wisdom and romance, reawakening Anne's senses and giving her a new lust for life.' And boom, it stops there.
Despite the gorgeous scenery and culinary delights (only given French names so that we have no idea what the food is) the film is sweet but drags on and on with the same scenes re-played in different restaurants. In this time of CGI explosive blockbusters this little film is a respite. It cold have been more....
A romantic trip through France, written by a woman for women
I don't get the low rating for this film. As a man, I can understand how it would be borderline boring, but still it is a good movie, with good acting and very beautiful content. I went through a trip in France, with the great lighting and the great food and the beautiful countryside and I can tell you it's truly what women want. My wife was happy for months. And this is the film adaptation of such a trip, written and directed by Eleanor Coppola.
There are two problems with this film. One is that this is about rich people traveling through France and getting the best of the best from fancy restaurants and places for the in-people. That can annoy some folk. The other is that there really is no story. There's just a French guy trying to woo a beautiful American married woman.
One can learn a lot from this film, too. Basically, the writer says "hey, men that take their wives for granted! Your women want romance!". OK, that can be annoying, too, but also serves as a manual on how women would like to be made to feel.
Bottom line: a true romantic road trip movie, with no pointless comedy or drama added. Refreshing and inspiring.