Julie Delpy 2 Days In New York


Julie Delpy 2 Days In New York

2 Days In New York

Cast: Julie Delpy, Chris Rock, Albert Delpy
Director: Julie Delpy
Genre: Comedy
Rated: MA
Running Time: 91 minutes

Synopsis: French photographer Marion, the neurotic star of 2 Days in Paris, has broken up with Jack (Adam Goldberg) and now lives with a new lover and child, in the Big Apple. Julie Delpy strikes back with a sequel to her much-loved 2007 worldwide success that redefined the filmic words 'romantic' and 'comedy'.

2 Days In Paris was Delpy's directorial debut and heralded a filmmaker with a distinctive voice that owed something to the quirks of Woody Allen. She returns with 2 Days In New York, once again as writer and director as well as playing the lead.

Picking up a few years down the line in NYC, Marion's new beau is Mingus, a hip talk-radio host and journalist played by Chris Rock.

They live cozily in a New York apartment with their cat and two young children from previous relationships. But when Marion's jolly father (played by Delpy's real-life dad, Albert Delpy), her oversexed sister, and her sister's outrageous boyfriend unceremoniously descend upon them for an overseas visit, it initiates two unforgettable days of family mayhem. With their unabashed openness and sexual frankness, the triumvirate is bereft of boundaries or filters... and no one is left unscathed in its wake. The visitors push every button in the couple's relationship, truly putting it to the test. How will the couple fare... when the French come to New York?

Release Date: November 22nd, 2012


About the Film

It's the next big step: meeting the relatives. Maybe you get a little nervous, take a little while to warm up to everybody, but, hopefully, everything will go smoothly. But somebody forgot to warn poor Mingus: Her Come The French.

After shooting her 2009 dark thriller, "The Countess," writer/director/actress Julie Delpy decided it was time for a comedy - a genre at which she had proven herself quite adept two years earlier, with "2 Days in Paris," a successful romantic comedy co---starring Adam Goldberg. "I thought, 'Okay, why not a sequel?'" she says. "But I knew I couldn't do a sequel with the same guy, because that would be too much like 'Before Sunset' and 'Before Sunrise,'" two romantic gems she had starred in and co-write with Ethan Hawke, directed by Richard Linklater. "Out of respect for those films, and for Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke, I knew I couldn't do that."

So Julie Delpy spent the next year or so thinking and taking notes, as she usually does, figuring out the next step in Marion's life. "Marion seems to go from relationship to relationship. She's not after getting the ring and getting married - her issue is commitment, chemistry and figuring out her life," she says. "That's the serious part."

All good comedies, the director notes, have, at their core, a true reality. "I like to build on real ground - not necessarily drama, but on a reality. I'll pick a subject matter that could be a drama. It doesn't necessarily need to be a funny story. But then I turn it around with crazy situations and - that's what makes it funny."

The first thing Julie Delpy had to figure out was who Marion's new guy would be - and that didn't take long. "I thought, 'I want someone new as a boyfriend. Who is it?' And the first person that came to mind was Chris Rock.'"

While the obvious thought would be that Julie Delpy wanted to create a bi-racial couple, that's not the case. "It was never about that. I just love his energy. Chris Rock has a neurotic side, which I really like. He has an angst about him that I think is endearing and which I thought would make a really interesting dynamic in this relationship.

Once she had decided on Marion's other half, Julie Delpy enlisted two old friends Alexia Landeau and Alex Nahon - to help her develop the story. Both had appeared in the previous "2 Days" film, as Marion's sister, Rose, and ex-boyfriend, Manu, respectively. "I've known Alex Nahon since I was 19, and Alexia Landeau for about 14 years." She and Alexia Landeau eventually wrote the final screenplay together.

"I had the story in mind, but I wanted to write with someone," Julie Delpy says. "I've been writing alone for many, many years. I love writing, but when I write alone, I can get stuck in my head. It's like I'm talking to myself. But when I write with someone, it becomes a game. You bounce ideas off each other. Of course, I always end up getting my ideas in!" she laughs.

The film begins with Marion giving us a quick capsule of what's happened prior, explaining to her child - and us - how she is now a single mom with a young son, and that grandpa and Auntie Rose are coming for a visit - all via a pair of hand puppets. "I had actually used that with my own son," she explains. "I wanted to explain to him what had happened to my mother, and that I needed to go back to work. And that was the perfect way for me to explain it to him, so that he wouldn't feel abandoned."

Marion herself has a young boy (fathered by Jack, the Adam Goldberg character from the previous film), and Mingus has a young daughter, also from a previous marriage. "He's had two marriages, so he's not perfect at it either. He's learned from his previous experiences to be on the lookout for a sign of anything crazy." And over a two---day period, he gets an eyeful.

"Prior to the family visiting, the relationship is working just fine. But then we have two days - a time limitation, which is interesting - where her family comes to visit, and it stirs up all kinds of things for her." Everything from the death of her mom, a gallery opening of her art, to the big question of whether the soul actually exists - which she explores by selling hers to an anonymous bidder as a conceptual art piece! "I wanted to bring all that out, so that Mingus can see it and ask, 'So is this the real you?'"

At the other end of the handle stirring the pot are the three visitors, led by Julie Delpy's own father, veteran French actor Albert Delpy, whose hilarious performance as Marion's loopy dad, Jeannot, is one of the highlights of the film. "I was raised by a big child," the director laughs. "He's a wild beast. I saw him onstage in the 70s doing the most insane things, in plays that were just crazy. I've seen him play women, junkies. . . everything." Julie Delpy wrote the part specifically for her father (who also appeared in the previous film). "I know who he is, and I know what he's capable of. And I know what to do to get him to go to a place where, you know…'There he goes.'"

While the younger Julie Delpy knew what to expect from Albert Delpy, it was a bit of a shock for Chris Rock, it turns out. "I don't think he was truly prepared to have an interaction with someone like my dad! I could see it in Chris Rock's face - at times, he was, like, 'Oh, my God - what's gonna happen?' But it was all a lot of fun for everyone."

Also visiting is Marion's sister, Rose, played by Alexia Landeau. "Marion herself is not very analytical," Julie Delpy says of her own character. "She's a bit neurotic and unaware of what she's doing. She acts before thinking about what she's about to do. She's much like me, if I wasn't as analytical as I am - I think everything through 10 times before doing it," she laughs. Rose, she says, "is like Marion multiplied times 10."

A child psychologist, the younger sibling has a penchant for analysing the non-existent "problems" of her sister's son, a constant irritation to Marion and source of many a cat fight in the film. "Rose is a bit jealous of her sister, whom she loves and wishes she was more like." Though she herself has no sisters, the love---hate dynamic between the two was a familiar one to Julie Delpy. "I've seen quite a bit of this between sisters, with friends that have smaller or bigger sisters. With these two, it's a source of trouble, and it's really funny."

Making things worse is the presence of Manu (Alex Nahon), the uninvited ex-boyfriend of Marion - and current beau of her sister. Played with robust egotism by Alex Nahon, Manu (especially with his girlfriend's help) is the source of plenty of trouble for Mingus - and plenty of laughs. "Manu is a nightmare come true," Julie Delpy notes. "He says and does things that just make your skin crawl."

So wait a minute - aren't the French supposed to be those polite, sophisticated people with the berets who say "oui" and "monsieur" and all that? "Mingus isn't dealing with those kind of French," Julie Delpy laughs. "He's facing the Gaulois." As in the Gauls, the ancient French who fought Julius Caesar and worshipped boars. "All they thought about was food, having fun and sex. We all come from those very tough-skinned, eccentrics." Just watch Albert Delpy's Jeannot in any scene in the movie, and you'll get the picture.

While his character is mostly a serious one in the film, Chris Rock has plenty of opportunity to give us… Chris Rock. Particularly when, perplexed by any situation, Mingus has an informal chat with one of his heroes, President Obama (okay, one of those full-sized cardboard cutouts of President Obama you can get at any gift shop in Times Square). Everything from dealing relationships to whether it's cool to address him as "Barack."

As you'll probably guess, Julie Delpy's comedic sense is based in her admiration of classic screwball comedies. "I love that stuff," Julie Delpy says. "I was brought up on all kinds of different comedies, but I love absurd comedy."

In one hilarious sequence, for example, Mingus is trying in vain to have a reasonable conversation at the dinner table with Jeannot, who, barely speaking any English, gets "assistance" from Manu - who's not much better, mistranslating everything that comes out of Mingus's mouth. ["Aren't you on the radio?" "Yes, I have two shows on Public Radio and one on Sirius." "He says he has the flu, it may be serious."] If talking to Jeannot isn't hard enough by itself, the two sisters are going at it over Rose's continued misdiagnosis of Marion's son.

"I love this kind of mayhem - no one understands anything in a conversation that's going nowhere, and the sisters are fighting over kids and autism and screwing ex-boyfriends," Julie Delpy says. "It's the kind of absurd moment that just makes me laugh."

The scene is also a perfect example of the incredible editing work of film editor Isabelle Devinck, who worked with Julie Delpy on her last film, "Le Skylab." While, just as with her writing, Julie Delpy often edits her films herself, she and Isabelle Devinck worked together here as a kind of a tag team for comic timing. "She's my favourite person on the planet right now," the director states. "We have such a wonderful time working together, because we have the same sense of humour. It's like having two brains."

The mistranslation sequence required special care to turn out as funny as Julie Delpy wished. "Isabelle Devinck and I spent three weeks on that scene alone," she explains. "It was very important for it to have that experience of back---and---forth, between them trying to have this crazy conversation and the sisters fighting in the back. Those kinds of scenes are the trickiest things to do. If you're a few frames off, it doesn't work. It has to be understandable, so you can get what's going on. The comedy has to work on both sides."

Another treat from the editing room is a wonderful series of montages, used, for example, to give us, in a fun, brief capsule, the path of Jeannot's life, or fill us in on the visiting French's day of sightseeing around the Big Apple. "Most of those kinds of scenes in movies show the with a few seconds at this famous location, a few at another. I thought it would be funny to have a montage of photos where we see every landmark in New York in 30 seconds." The sequence is comprised of hundreds of snapshots, taken with a Canon 5D digital still camera - all looking like a tourist (from the looks of them, probably Jeannot) took them. "That was the goal."

So does the French invasion have a positive or negative effect on Marion and Mingus's relationship? Just ask the puppets…

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