The Girl from Paris Review

Girl from Paris, The
Thirtysomething Parisienne reaches an uneasy understanding curmudgeonly farmer who's rundown farm she purchases.

by Patrick Peters |
Published on
Release Date:

12 Jul 2002

Running Time:

103 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

Girl from Paris, The

Conservative in storyline and visual style, Christian Carion's debut is nevertheless an ambitious attempt to tackle a range of themes without lamenting or lecturing, as Mathilde Seigner's thirtysomething Parisienne reaches an uneasy understanding with Michel Serrault's curmudgeonly farmer amidst the ruins of regional, generational and sexual prejudices.

Certainly, there's an unashamedly melodramatic aspect to the widowed Serrault's decision to advise the self-contained novice who purchased his rundown farm.

It may occasionally romanticise the seasonal shifts in the Rhein-Alp landscape, but its keen commercial eye suggests there is another way of considering the crisis in European agriculture than the crud-encrusted authenticity of Andrew Kotting's This Filthy Earth.

It may occasionally romanticise the seasonal shifts in the Rhein-Alp landscape, but its keen commercial eye suggests there is another way of considering the crisis in European agriculture than the crud-encrusted authenticity of Andrew Kotting's This Filthy Earth.
Just so you know, whilst we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website, we never allow this to influence product selections - read why you should trust us