A Los Angeles lawman eludes thugs while helping a Chinese woman escape from the sex trade. Chinese-American screen icon Bai Ling and TV star Chad Allen star in this tense drama.A Los Angeles lawman eludes thugs while helping a Chinese woman escape from the sex trade. Chinese-American screen icon Bai Ling and TV star Chad Allen star in this tense drama.A Los Angeles lawman eludes thugs while helping a Chinese woman escape from the sex trade. Chinese-American screen icon Bai Ling and TV star Chad Allen star in this tense drama.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Ron Jeremy
- Bartender
- (as Ron Jeremy Hyatt)
Masasa Moyo
- Golden Gate Bartender
- (as Masasa)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
10leslorna
Ill watch Bai Ling in anything which is explaining why I have seen a lot of strange things mostly off of the internet. But this was an actual movie and I really enjoyed it because of it. Chad Allen is also great but, I GUESS WE ALREAD KNEW THAT!! By "we" I mean it is the girls know it!~! But now the boys can too. Although I am a guy. Also Chad and Ling have such good chemistry which is great but also very sexual. Also this movie was so good because they are both in it at the same time. Not apart like before!!! You will loove this movie especially, if you love Paris--which I do of course. And not that Paris Hilton! Yuch! The city.
Paris is an impressive combination of a unique, socially-minded, film-noir plot, beautiful visual motifs, and further exploration of what DV filmmaking can look like.
Bai Ling is captivating in every scene she's in, and Chad Allen is perfectly suited for the role of the young, struggling cop. We really come to care about both of their conflicted characters.
Throughout the film the repetitive use of mirrors is just one of several visual elements that serve to make Paris artistically moving, and this, in combination with a twisiting plot that takes us between the seedier parts of Los Angeles and Los Vegas, makes this a film you can't stop once you've started.
Bai Ling is captivating in every scene she's in, and Chad Allen is perfectly suited for the role of the young, struggling cop. We really come to care about both of their conflicted characters.
Throughout the film the repetitive use of mirrors is just one of several visual elements that serve to make Paris artistically moving, and this, in combination with a twisiting plot that takes us between the seedier parts of Los Angeles and Los Vegas, makes this a film you can't stop once you've started.
Paris is a very ordinary corrupt-cops-in-the-underworld movie, just laden with cliches, and its struggle to rise above them isn't very successful. There's not much originality in either the script or direction; from the cop who drives a sixties-vintage car to the address he wants written down on a barroom
matchbook, we've seen all of it before.
The movie looks good, and some of the performances are strong. Chad Allen
does show some chops, and an ability to hold the camera's attention, even if his range here is limited. Some of the blame for that has to lie with the script and the unconvincing situations it puts him in. And maybe he's better off not trying to play a character's depth when there is none given him to play. Bai Ling also
acquits herself credibly and as someone else noted here, there is some screen chemistry between the two stars.
But after all that, I'm still left with one question; how does a guy get shot in the back, from the side?
matchbook, we've seen all of it before.
The movie looks good, and some of the performances are strong. Chad Allen
does show some chops, and an ability to hold the camera's attention, even if his range here is limited. Some of the blame for that has to lie with the script and the unconvincing situations it puts him in. And maybe he's better off not trying to play a character's depth when there is none given him to play. Bai Ling also
acquits herself credibly and as someone else noted here, there is some screen chemistry between the two stars.
But after all that, I'm still left with one question; how does a guy get shot in the back, from the side?
A demonstration of how good a performer can be, even when the movie is ineptly directed and photographed. Bai Ling stands out for her emotional range and beauty, despite the fact that the camera here doesn't fails to take best advantage of her. The plot is the routine corrupt cops story, full of plot holes, not making much sense, with a couple thrown together and finding tragic love. The film's style constantly distracts and annoys with repetitive canted angles and a failure to take advantage of scenic possibilities, especially in the desert. The seams show so badly that it is barely above the standard of a student film. Bai Ling deserves so much better, yet withal still worth seeing just for her sake as a lesson in the art of acting.
The love story between Bai Ling and Chad Allen is powerful and I thought very tender. The two have very potent on-screen chemistry that heightens their plight as star-crossed lovers on the run.
The movie has some great locations in Las Vegas and then out in the desert, and some fun cameos (remember Karen Black? Oh, and RON JEREMY! :)
BTW. Chad Allen is HOTTT. he's the reason I decided to watch this film, but I wasn't expecting to enjoy the romance of the two main characters nearly so much, and now I want to go and watch all of Bai Ling's other films!
The movie has some great locations in Las Vegas and then out in the desert, and some fun cameos (remember Karen Black? Oh, and RON JEREMY! :)
BTW. Chad Allen is HOTTT. he's the reason I decided to watch this film, but I wasn't expecting to enjoy the romance of the two main characters nearly so much, and now I want to go and watch all of Bai Ling's other films!
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- SoundtracksMince Up
Performed by Octant
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Париж
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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- Budget
- $2,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
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