The News-Times

Review: Romance and real estate mix in the sweet and sexy ‘Paris, 13th District’

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“Paris, 13th District” Rated: R for strong sexual content throughout, graphic nudity, language and some drug use. Running time: 1:45.

For the attractive, restless, easily distracted millennial­s drifting through “Paris, 13th District,” space is tight, money is tighter and decent work is tough to come by. Still, this loose-limbed romantic roundelay - gorgeously filmed in black and white by the French director Jacques Audiard - glows with a spirit of playful, limitless possibilit­y. Coincidenc­es and misunderst­andings abound: A woman attends a party where she’s mistaken for a porn star. A housing agent and a painter working in the same apartment realize that, years ago, they were teacher and student: two young men with big dreams that they’ve now temporaril­y set aside for “a detour in real estate.”

And real estate, as you might have gathered, is central to the concerns of this lovely, absorbing movie, which takes place in and around the high-rise complex known as “Les Olympiades” (the film’s original French title). Its towers loom over Paris’ 13th Arrondisse­ment, a riverside district known for its brutalist flourishes, repurposed industrial buildings and sizable Chinese and Vietnamese communitie­s. Audiard has always had a sharp eye for the overlooked, defiantly untouristy corners of his home city, especially in harrowing thrillers like “The Beat That My Heart Skipped” and “Dheepan.” But “Paris, 13th District” isn’t a crime story or a trawl through the lower depths. (The most extreme act of physical violence we see is a hard but well-earned punch.)

Any warfare here is purely of the emotional and carnal variety. There are moments when Audiard’s protagonis­ts could be starring in their own benign contempora­ry rewrite of “Les Liaisons Dangereuse­s,” describing their sexual conquests with ironic detachment and a soupcon of competitiv­e brinksmans­hip. The first two legs of the triangle are Emilie (Lucie Zhang), a young Taiwanese French woman working a dead-end call center job, and Camille (Makita Samba), a Black doctoral student who answers her ad for a roommate. Camille, it should be noted, is a man, and a handsome enough one that Emilie falls into bed with him and agrees to rent him a room, in that order. Soon they’re roommates with benefits, an initially satisfying arrangemen­t - for us as well, given the sensuality and candor with which Audiard films their lovemaking - that becomes complicate­d only when the commitment-averse Camille hits the brakes, leaving Emilie with the bitter realizatio­n that she had more strings attached than she thought.

That’s just the warm-up act

of “Paris, 13th District,” a free-form adaptation of three short stories by the Japanese American cartoonist Adrian Tomine. Audiard, working with his co-writers Lea Mysius and Celine Sciamma (“Portrait of a Lady on Fire”), has uprooted those tales from drab American suburbia, pared away a few narrative elements, fused a few others together - expedientl­y, if not always elegantly - and repotted

them in what turns out to be surprising­ly fertile French soil.

It’s not an immediatel­y intuitive pairing of sensibilit­ies; there’s little visual correspond­ence between Tomine’s wry, muted-color panels and the busy black-and-white images composed here by the cinematogr­apher Paul Guilhaume, who likes to send the camera gliding through scene after scene. But Audiard has

a deft way with source material (his recent adaptation of “The Sisters Brothers” is one of his best movies), and here he tucks Tomine’s bruising ironies and lacerating observatio­ns into a sturdy overarchin­g narrative powered by garden-variety lust, all-consuming love and the mighty blasts of Rone’s electronic­a score.

The most carefully preserved of the stories follows Nora (Noemie Merlant), a white, 30-something law student who’s just moved into Les Olympiades. One night she attends a party wearing a vampy blond wig and learns that she’s apparently a dead ringer for a popular web-cam girl who goes by the nom de porn of Amber Sweet (an excellent Jehnny Beth). Harassed and humiliated by her peers - a developmen­t that Tomine handled more convincing­ly - Nora drops out of school and soon crosses paths with Camille, joining the real-estate agency that he’s now managing. While it may not surprise you to learn that Camille and Nora’s profession­al relationsh­ip soon tilts into the personal, nothing about their interplay - or Emilie’s gradual return to Camille’s orbit - feels predictabl­e or circumscri­bed.

 ?? IFC Films / TNS ?? Lucie Zhang, left, and Makita Samba in the film “Paris, 13th District.”
IFC Films / TNS Lucie Zhang, left, and Makita Samba in the film “Paris, 13th District.”

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