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IMDbPro

2 Days in Paris

  • 2007
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
32K
YOUR RATING
Julie Delpy and Adam Goldberg in 2 Days in Paris (2007)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:12
2 Videos
76 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

Marion and Jack try to rekindle their relationship by traveling to Paris. They visit Marion's parents, but also meet some of her ex-boyfriends.Marion and Jack try to rekindle their relationship by traveling to Paris. They visit Marion's parents, but also meet some of her ex-boyfriends.Marion and Jack try to rekindle their relationship by traveling to Paris. They visit Marion's parents, but also meet some of her ex-boyfriends.

  • Director
    • Julie Delpy
  • Writer
    • Julie Delpy
  • Stars
    • Julie Delpy
    • Adam Goldberg
    • Daniel Brühl
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    32K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Julie Delpy
    • Writer
      • Julie Delpy
    • Stars
      • Julie Delpy
      • Adam Goldberg
      • Daniel Brühl
    • 114User reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos2

    2 Days In Paris
    Trailer 2:12
    2 Days In Paris
    2 Days In Paris: French Condoms Are Too Small
    Clip 0:51
    2 Days In Paris: French Condoms Are Too Small
    2 Days In Paris: French Condoms Are Too Small
    Clip 0:51
    2 Days In Paris: French Condoms Are Too Small

    Photos76

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    Top cast69

    Edit
    Julie Delpy
    Julie Delpy
    • Marion
    Adam Goldberg
    Adam Goldberg
    • Jack
    Daniel Brühl
    Daniel Brühl
    • Lukas
    Marie Pillet
    • Anna - Marion's Mother
    Albert Delpy
    Albert Delpy
    • Jeannot - Marion's Father
    Alexia Landeau
    Alexia Landeau
    • Rose - Marion's Sister
    Adan Jodorowsky
    Adan Jodorowsky
    • Mathieu
    Alexandre Nahon
    Alexandre Nahon
    • Manu
    • (as Alex Nahon)
    Charlotte Maury-Sentier
    • Robbed Lady
    Vanessa Seward
    • Vanessa
    Thibault De Lussy
    • Gaël
    Chick Ortega
    • First Taxi Driver
    Patrick Chupin
    • Taxi Driver with Jack Russel
    Antar Boudache
    • Flirtatious Taxi Driver
    Ludovic Berthillot
    • Racist Taxi Driver
    Hubert Toint
    Hubert Toint
    • Music Day Taxi Driver
    Sandra Berrebi
    • Sandra
    Arnaud Beunaiche
    • Edouard
    • Director
      • Julie Delpy
    • Writer
      • Julie Delpy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews114

    6.732.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8evawatches

    A really good laugh

    The culture-clash story might have been done before, but this is still a very refreshing and most of the time utterly hilarious movie. Myself and the rest of the theater burst out laughing every couple of minutes, which makes me forgive the few scenes that made me uncomfortable. Definitely not for the faint of heart or easily offended!

    The characters might seem over the top at times, but they're still likable and real (as witnessed by the fact that the artwork in the gallery was actually made by Julie Delpy's father). I thought that Julie Delpy's parents stole the show whenever they were on screen, although Delpy and Goldberg both do a very good job.

    All in all, it feels like a very personal look at French (or rather, Parisian bohemian) life, and very much worth a viewing. Or even two.
    9robert-current

    A New Standard in Love Stories

    I watched 2 Days in Paris staring Julie Delpy and Adam Goldberg last night. I've never much cared for Adam Goldberg, and I spent my own 2 days in Paris in 2000 and it was the hardest 2 days on a relationship I've ever had. Maybe that's why this has become one of my favorite films of all time. Watching Adam Goldberg deal with some of the same foreign travel problems and relationship issues that torture him throughout this movie.

    The movie is half in French. It is definitely to your advantage if you don't speak French, because a key plot element is how Jack (Adam Goldberg) becomes so regularly frustrated by not understanding the language.

    In the end, I think I loved this movie because it is one of the best love stories I've ever seen. It's not a Hollywood fairytale romance, it's real, it's gritty, quirky, funny, and ugly, just like love can be in real life.
    9khamsun

    Surprisingly enjoyable comedy

    This is a somewhat romantic comedy about a french-American couple spending two turbulent days living with her parents in Paris.

    My expectations were fairly low when I was coerced into watching Julie Delpy's directorial debut. After the first couple of minutes (and arguments between Delpy and Goldberg, respectively) I was still skeptical. But by the time her (real life, by the way) parents were introduced, things got really hysterical and I was holding my sides laughing throughout the rest of the movie. It has to be said that most of the jokes are sexual in nature, so this is no film for the young or easily offended. There are also moments where Delpys character is a little annoying, but those are thankfully far and few between. Similarly, I approved the brevity of Daniel Brühls appearance. Special mention has to go to Adam Goldberg, however, whose antics lend the movie the lion's share of its funny moments - I certainly hope to see more of him in the future.
    10jeanedouardpouliot

    Smart, funny and not for everyone

    From a study of the movie poster, you might be tempted to think this is another pointless romantic movie about two lovers in France. "Oui," they will fight, love, eat croissants and find meaning. How drearily cliché.

    But, surprise of surprises, "Two Days in Paris" is a very funny, very soulful and very interesting look at a slice of the life of two quite interesting characters. On the surface, Marion (Julie Delpy) and Jack (Adam Goldberg) are two irritatingly pretentious neurotics. Both 35 and childless, they have been traveling Europe for 2 weeks, deciding to stop in Paris for a couple days to drop in on Marion's family and friends before flying home to New York. Marion is French, the child of left-wing French artists. Jack is a New Yorker, a political lefty whose shallow grasp of culture (he speaks only English, for instance) is purely American. She had aspirations to be a photographer, though (for reasons the film will make clear) her work is strictly third-class. He takes pictures of everything, but has no eye for form, color or composition.

    What's fun about the film is the complexity of the relationships. To Jack's annoyance, Marion keeps bumping into her old boyfriends. And her father seems intent on humiliating or offending him and his American tastes. A dinner scene in which he is offered a rabbit's head is just hilarious. When offered carrots, he says, "So, we're going to eat the bunny's food, too?" For her part, Marion cannot understand why Jack finds her continued casual friendships with exes to be so extraordinary. And Jack, utterly clueless about the nuances (or even the surface content) of Marion's conversations, is getting paranoid that he is not being told everything. At one point, Marion is holding a violent argument with a racist cabdriver. Jack knows something is going on, but can't get past Marion's insistence that everything is fine.

    I realize as I write this that I am doing no justice to the joyful sense of voyeurism that the film affords.The film is so smartly written and fast-paced that sometimes you forget you are watching a film and think you are watching dinner with Julie's real family or attending parties with her smug and artsy friends. The film is completely convincing and has a depth of heart I didn't expect. It deal with secrets and the frustration that comes from knowing another person. The language and culture barriers then act as metaphors for the inability of two people, even lovers, to inhabit another's life and experience.

    "Two Days in Paris" is not for all. Marion and Jack are exemplars of the worst aspects of US and European artistic classes. Their treatment of a group of Americans on a "Da Vinci Code" tour tells you more than you want to know about the antagonisms between right and left. But their smug, knowing put downs of Bush and Cheney supporters are less political messages by the movie makers than markers of the characters' personalities. This movie about liberals does not necessarily espouse their world view. But, at heart, this is a love story, not a political drama. Secondly, since we are talking about shallow artists, there is an enormous amount of politico-sexual "art" on display in the film. While this may be offensive to the audience, its presence helps to define the characters themselves. It's not there to titillate the viewer, but to describe the actors.

    Delpy, who wrote, directed, produced and acted in the movie, has made a master work that is complex, evocative, real and quite beautiful. She has captured aspects of the French national character that seem quite convincing. She has also aptly captured the emotions and dilemmas of 30-something adults who, under it all, are still looking for meaning, belonging and peace. Goldberg gave a powerful and hilarious performance. He's Ben Stiller with a soul.

    If you can put up with the film's politics, you will be amply rewarded. Magnifique!
    8Bsachs

    A pleasant surprise

    What is it with Julie Delpy? I have only seen a hand-full of her movies but she always manages to surprise and excite. She acts brilliantly as the title character in Tarantinoesque Killing Zoë, manages to stay convincing in the far-fetched An American Werewolf in Paris and is great as a young lover in Before Sunrise and as a confident woman in the sequel Before Sunset. This brings us to 2 days in Paris which could easily be mistaken for a continuation of the Sunrise/Sunset movies. And that would be a huge mistake: 2 Days in Paris is a dialogue driven romantic comedy dissecting a couples quasi-dysfunctional relationships and how they have to come to terms with their individual imperfections to be able to truly coexist as a pair. Though that may not sound like compelling viewing its actually hugely entertaining as it dissects a million small mix-ups which can make or break a couple.

    Adam Goldberg is compelling as the sarcastic yet witty American boyfriend visiting Paris for the first time with his girlfriend. What follows is a series of hugely entertaining misunderstandings involving cross cultural differences, hilarious conversations in broken French with family members and a series of unplanned rendezvous with former lovers all of which combine to drive him high up the paranoia ladder.

    It's refreshing to find out that not only does Julie Delpy act brilliantly as the naive and clumsy Marion but she also directed and wrote it, heck she even composed the soundtrack.

    The lasting message of this movie is although you might hate 80% of the things your lover does if you just cant live without them don't lose them

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The characters of Marion's parents are played by Delpy's real life parents, Albert Delpy and Marie Pillet.
    • Goofs
      When Marion tells Jack she doesn't use that thermometer in the mouth, Jack spits it out and it falls near the side wall, but Marion picks it up from the bed.
    • Quotes

      Marion: It always fascinated me how people go from loving you madly to nothing at all, nothing. It hurts so much. When I feel someone is going to leave me, I have a tendency to break up first before I get to hear the whole thing. Here it is. One more, one less. Another wasted love story. I really love this one. When I think that its over, that I'll never see him again like this... well yes, I'll bump into him, we'll meet our new boyfriend and girlfriend, act as if we had never been together, then we'll slowly think of each other less and less until we forget each other completely. Almost. Always the same for me. Break up, break down. Drunk up, fool around. Meet one guy, then another, fuck around. Forget the one and only. Then after a few months of total emptiness start again to look for true love, desperately look everywhere and after two years of loneliness meet a new love and swear it is the one, until that one is gone as well. There's a moment in life where you can't recover any more from another break-up. And even if this person bugs you sixty percent of the time, well you still can't live without him. And even if he wakes you up every day by sneezing right in your face, well you love his sneezes more than anyone else's kisses.

    • Crazy credits
      In the portion of the end credits devoted to Thank Yous, scrawled outside the normal printing, are various language versions of Thank You (Spanish, German, etc.).
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Rush Hour 3/Daddy Day Camp/Becoming Jane/Stardust/Rocket Science/2 Days in Paris (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Minor Leap
      Written by Titus Vollmer

      Performed by Titus Vollmer's Bluezzboat

      Copyright Control

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 11, 2007 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Deux jours à Paris
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • Polaris Film Production & Finance
      • Tempête Sous un Crâne
      • 3L Filmproduktion
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,433,994
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $173,641
      • Aug 12, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,776,159
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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