Recently, his work has veered from the atrocious (Cassandra’s Dream) to the great (Vicky Cristina Barcelona), with a handful of tittersome morsels in between (Whatever Works, You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger). He’s still working at an alarming rate, and is still quite happy to gaze at intellectual middle class types and their over-inflated personal problems. Midnight In Paris, the latest in what could be called Allen’s ‘tourist’ films, makes no claim at being anything else, starting as it does with an endless montage of Parisian vistas, a ‘day in the life’ overture which roots the audience in the French capital – its boulevards, its landmarks, its cultural history. Paris brings out the romantic in Allen, as was previously seen 15 years ago in the musical Everyone Says I Love You, in which he staged a languid, dreamy song-and-dance sequence alongside the Seine, featuring himself and a knockout Goldie Hawn. Here, once more, Paris is a city that devours and delights, as Gil Pender (Owen Wilson), an erstwhile Hollywood scriptwriter, comes to the city with his fiance Inez (Rachel McAdams). After years of hackdom, he wishes to write his first novel, but his neurotic self-flagellation gets in the way, especially when faced with the aggressively-intellectual braggart Paul (Michael Sheen). In a very similar way to the 1985 flick The Purple Rose of Cairo, where a dashing Jeff Daniels slips out of a cinema screen to woo a besotted Mia Farrow, the sudden shift into fantasy comes as a pleasant surprise, and Allen approaches what is quite a quirky, odd premise with an airy, easy feel, full of humour and wonder. On his late-night excursions, Gil meets a whole bunch of artistic ex-pats, from F Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, to Cole Porter and Gertrude Stein. With a wit that is more often seen in his prose work nowadays, Allen sketches these cultural figures with not so much a reliance on biography, as the characters suggested by their work. It’s a brilliant set-up, and Allen fills out this premise with his highest concentration of jokes in years, leaving behind the desperate, awkward stabs at humour that have plagued his recent comedies, and at times even hinting at his wild, overstuffed scripts of the 70s. It even, for a time, rises above being ‘Lost Generation Fan-Fiction’, and most of its references avoid the curse of the literary in-joke. The image of Gil calming Zelda Fitzgerald’s emotional turmoil with a dose of Valium is just too funny, as is a hammy, eccentric cameo from Adrien Brody as Salvador Dali. Indeed, the film is carried by Wilson, who is an easy target for those seeking the ‘Woody Allen character’. Although, while Gil fulfils the familiar checklist of insecurities, it is his dopey, naive outlook that sells the film, and even though Allen is the archetypal nervous neurotic, Wilson is better as the lovable fool. His bewildered reaction shots act as repeated punchlines throughout the movie, providing a perfect foil to the broad performances of the rest of the cast, both in the past and the present. Midnight In Paris is so warm and delightful, that when it hits a slightly undercooked third act, where the jokes start to dry up, and resolution comes a little easily, it’s not a big deal. It’s testament to the solid, evocative ideas that form its backbone, that of exploring the character’s crisis in such an expressionistic, fantastical way, while also assessing the psycho-geography of Paris – how the city today co-exists with its many past incarnations. And when Gil is hit by a revelation, that nostalgia for bygone eras always elides the negative aspects, it is hard to not draw a comparison with Allen himself, who, even at his peak, had his off days. It asks the question: why obsess over what once was, when this director’s latest work is such a gem? Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.
Midnight In Paris Review
<span title='2025-08-02 00:00:00 +0000 UTC'>August 2, 2025</span> · 4 min · 664 words · Robert Petitti