In. Paris — Midnight

Gil’s journey isn’t about actually changing the past, but about learning to embrace the now. By the end, he leaves Inez, quits his screenwriting job, and stays in Paris to write his novel — not because the 1920s were better, but because he finally accepts that every age has its magic and its flaws.

The film argues that every generation suffers from "Golden Age thinking." In the 1920s, the characters long for the 1890s. In the 1890s, they long for the Renaissance. There is no "perfect" time because our dissatisfaction is internal, not temporal. midnight in. paris

Share.

Leave A Reply