Le Roi de Paris (1995)
Directed by Dominique Maillet

Drama / Romance

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Le Roi de Paris (1995)
Despite being a tad overwritten and somewhat marred by some cliché-prone mise-en-scène, Le Roi de Paris is a respectable first feature from director Dominique Maillet, a film that regales us with the high production standards we have come to expect of a quality French period drama in recent years. In a made-to-measure principal role, Philippe Noiret gives another of his standout performances, one that alternates wildly between bellicose excess and introspective quietude with no apparent lack of continuity. Although dwarfed by Noiret's stature, his co-stars, Veronika Varga and Manuel Blanc manage to make their presence felt and leave us in little doubt that they both have a promising career ahead of them.

Whilst the film essentially boils down to just another love-triangle melodrama, Maillet's deft treatment of his subject, coupled with Noiret's performance, makes it something more substantial.  Rather like François Truffaut's Le Dernier metro (1980), which the film occasionally resembles, Le Roi de Paris serves as a passionate tribute to the theatre of a bygone age (here the 1930s), accurately portraying the world of the stage and the colourful, mercurial characters that inhabited it. Self-indulgence is perhaps carried a little too far with the multitude of arcane references to theatre, plays and cinema of the time, most of which will doubtless pass right over the heads of all but a few spectators.  The threat which cinema posed to theatre is shoehorned into the film, but, again, this is something which could, and perhaps should, have been omitted as it adds nothing of substance to the narrative and merely provides an unwelcome distraction. These shortcomings aside, Le Roi de Paris is an engaging film that is amply redeemed by the quality of the performances. It would be seven years before Maillet made his next film, La Mémoire dans la chair (2012).
© James Travers 2004
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Film Synopsis

In the 1930s, Victor Derval is the most admired stage actor in Paris.  One night, he is accosted by a young Hungarian woman, Lisa Lanska.   Victor is so moved by her evident enthusiasm for the theatre that he gives her a job as his personal assistant.  When she has settled into his home, Victor realises he is in love with her, but so is his son Paul, a hot-headed young writer with revolutionary ideals.  The playwright Romain Coste also falls for Lisa's charms and creates a part for her in his next play.   Bitterly jealous of his father, Paul stages a drama of his own…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Dominique Maillet
  • Script: Jacques Fieschi, Dominique Maillet, Bernard Minoret, Jérôme Tonnerre
  • Cinematographer: Bernard Lutic
  • Music: Quentin Damamme
  • Cast: Philippe Noiret (Victor Derval), Veronika Varga (Lisa Lanska), Jacques Roman (Romain Coste), Manuel Blanc (Paul Derval), Michel Aumont (The Marquis de Castellac), Paulette Dubost (Raymonde), Corinne Cléry (Betty Favart), Ronny Coutteure (Emile), Franco Interlenghi (Bellières), Sacha Briquet (Roquépine), Bernard La Jarrige (Champmartin), Fabienne Chaudat (Angèle), Pierre Vial (Le ministre), Gaëtan Wenders (Treplev), Alexandre Shuat (Le metteur en scène), Gérard Couderc (Patron Boulard), Patrick Gourevitch (Patron Bal Nègre), Francis Bouc (Le vieux schnock), Gérard Boucaron (Régisseur Grande Comédie), Oguz Janus Lengyel (Duel arbiter)
  • Country: UK / France
  • Language: French
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 102 min

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