Review: Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris

Mar 14, 2012 15:21






It seems like the American cinema comes up with a good time travel film of a certain kind once every decade or so - Peggy Sue Got Married and Pleasantville come immediately to mind, as does Groundhog Day, in its own way.

Not strictly-speaking science fiction, these movies are more like fables, presenting time travel as an arbitrary fact which allows their protagonists to learn some life lesson, sometimes leading to acceptance of what is, more often leading to some sort of important life change.

That grand old man of American cinema, Woody Allen, is the latest to offer us a nostalgia-steeped visit to the past, along with a cinematic love-letter to a city that is not New York (for a change), but Paris. Paris now and, especially, Paris then.

The Oscar-winning Midnight In Paris has become Allen's most financially successful movie. Though flawed, it is the work of a master-crasftmen that tells its slender tale with style and efficiency, generating laughs and dramatic tension despite its decidedly old-fashioned pacing.

Does it deserve its awards and critical acclaim as Woody Allen's return to form? Click here for my full review (yes, with spoilers), Twilight of an auteur.
This entry was originally posted at http://ed-rex.dreamwidth.org/237349.html. Comment there using OpenID, or here as per normal.

woody allen, review, fantasy, midnight in paris, time travel, movies, science fiction

Previous post Next post
Up