The Knockturnal
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Videos
  • Covers
  • Merch
Film

Film Review: ‘Parisienne’ is a Tender Portrait of a Young Woman and of France

by Adam Hobbins March 14, 2016
by Adam Hobbins March 14, 2016 0 comments
4.9K

90s attitude and heartfelt intensity come across loud and clear.

Danielle Arbid’s latest film, Parisienne, was recently featured by Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Rendez-Vous with French Cinema festival.

Parisienne is immediately engaging as the film opens on a scene of Lina (Manal Issa) narrowly escaping her uncle as he attempts to rape her. We quickly learn that Lina is living with her aunt and uncle in the suburbs of Paris, having just moved there from Lebanon to start university. After the attempted rape, she refuses to return to their house and finds herself more or less alone in the city of lights in the 90s, when political tensions and ideological conflicts were at an extreme high.

The most beautiful quality about Lina is her incredibly genuine personality. She allows herself to be slightly naïve when it comes to being charmed by men. Yet she is smart, strong, and tough enough to find places to stay and ways to get by. She is charming and sweet, but quick and sharp also. She is a remarkably authentic character, a perfect portrayal of a university student, of an immigrant, of an unlikely Parisienne.

Issa’s performance is so utterly endearing that she is able to embody not only the particularities of being an outsider to any place at any time, but also the particularities of the French and Parisian environments during an important historical moment. It is through her authenticity and her passion for the city that she at first regards warily as a stranger, but eventually as a close friend, that she earns the moniker bestowed upon her by the film’s title. Lina truly becomes a Parisienne, fighting for her right to remain in the city and nation that has become hers despite the bumpy road it had once been for her.

At intervals throughout the film, the frame fades gently to black for a few seconds. These artistic insertions of some grounding blank screen, along with the surreal visual montages that make a few appearances, can be viewed as openings and closings of chapters in Lina’s story. They mark the points when Lina moves on from a place, an obstacle, or a man. Speaking of men, Lina dates three of them throughout the film, and they become as definitive of the film’s attitude as she is.

First, there is Jean-Marc (Paul Hamy), a much older married man who sweeps Lina off her feet with expensive meals and a stay at a château. Then, there is Julien (Damien Chapelle), a café waiter, rock music aficionado, and drug dealer who dreams of leaving for the United States in the same way that Lina left for France from Lebanon. Finally, there is Rafaël (Vincent Lacoste), a fellow university student who recruits Lina to help him publish his radically liberal independent newspaper and eventually helps her fight to renew her residence permit. This motley crew of boyfriends each have their effect on Lina. But rather than let herself be defined by them, she asserts herself and chooses to learn from each experience in the same way that she chooses to openly learn from Paris.

It is worth noting that the French title of the film was Peur de rien, which translates to ‘fear of nothing’. This is a beautifully apt title for a film about a woman who tackles a new life in a new world with absolutely nothing on her side but her own perseverance. Whichever title you choose to call it by, Parisienne is a film that strikes you right in the heart with its shocking genuineness of feeling before you can even notice it happening.

Parisienne is directed by Danielle Arbid and stars Manal Issa, Vincent Lacoste, Damien Chapelle, and Paul Hamy. It is currently in negotiations for theatrical and commercial release in the United States.

Photo credits: Film Society of Lincoln Center.

damien chapelledanielle arbidfilm society of lincoln centermanal issaparisiennepaul hamyRendez-Vous with French Cinemavincent lacoste
0 comments 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Adam Hobbins

previous post
Cast Attends ‘Eye In The Sky’ New York Premiere
next post
‘Game Of Thrones’ Cast To The Rescue

Related Posts

Beyond the Horizon: Why Project Hail Mary Is...

February 11, 2026

‘The (M) Factor 2’ Pulls Perimenopause Into the...

February 7, 2026

EXCLUSIVE: Christoph Waltz, Luc Besson, Caleb Landry Jones,...

February 6, 2026

‘Pillion” – An BDSM Love Story for the...

February 2, 2026

The Wrecking Crew Combines Buddy Cop Chaos With...

January 26, 2026

Sundance Film Festival Hosts Third Annual ‘Cheers, Queers’...

January 26, 2026

Night Patrol Stars Reflect on an Unforgettable Set...

January 23, 2026

Moses the Black Sets the Tone With a...

January 23, 2026

EXCLUSIVE: Stars Talk ‘Mercy’ at New York Premiere

January 21, 2026

Freddie Gibbs, RJ Cyler and Ryan Prows Talk...

January 15, 2026

Digital Cover No. 19

The Knockturnal Merch

Follow Us On The Gram

Follow on Instagram

About The Site

We are a collective of creative tastemakers made up of fashion, music and entertainment industry insiders. It’s all about access. You want it. We have it.

Terms Of Use

Privacy Policy

Meet The Team

CONTACT US

For general inquiries and more info on The Knockturnal, please contact our staff at:
info@theknockturnal.com
fashion@theknockturnal.com
advertising@theknockturnal.com
editorial@theknockturnal.com
beauty@theknockturnal.com

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube

© Copyright - The Knockturnal | Developed by CI Design + Media

The Knockturnal
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Videos
  • Covers
  • Merch