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		Paris Can Wait (9/10) 
		by Tony Medley 
		Runtime 92 minutes 
		OK for children. 
		For an 81 year old 
		writer/director/producer, Eleanor Coppola, this is an amazing 
		achievement. Even with fine performances by Diane Lane and Arnaud Viard 
		and a mercifully brief cameo by Alec Baldwin, the cinematography, 
		locations, and memorable recipes steal the show. 
		The film is the 
		somewhat autobiographical story of Coppola about an incident that 
		occurred when she was in her mid-70s. The stretch is that Coppola is a 
		long way from Diane Lane, who plays her in this film. Lane, at 52, is 
		more beautiful than most of the ingénues who populate Hollywood today 
		and will never be confused with a 73-year-old woman. But this is a movie 
		and it needs a woman a man will yearn for. 
		Anne (Lane) is married 
		to Michael (Baldwin), an actor who must travel from the French Riviera 
		to Budapest for a film. Anne isn’t feeling well and tells him she will 
		meet him in Paris. Jacques (Amaud Viard), a modern day Maurice 
		Chevalier, offers to drive her. Along the way he treats her to a 
		gorgeous tour of France, all the while subtly trying to seduce her. We 
		see terrific scenes of France, wonderful meals to which he introduces 
		her, incredible locales, superb acting, enticingly slow pace, and 
		delicious dialogue reminiscent of My Dinner with Andre (1981). 
		This is a delightful film for everybody. 
		Like a fine wine, 
		this ages well. I originally gave it a rating of 8/10, but the more I 
		think about it, the better I like it. 
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