映画の舞台に恋して、パリを巡ってみた。「勝手にしやがれ」のカンパーニュ・プルミエール通りが最高だった。

Column|2024.11.25

Text_Toshinori Okada
Photo_Toshinori Okada


In the footsteps of films: A Parisian pilgrimage
The highlight: Rue Campagne-Première, where Breathless ends.

 I’ve always loved Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless. In the final scene, Jean-Paul Belmondo’s character, Michel, flees down Rue Campagne-Première and collapses at the corner of Raspail Boulevard. His last words? “It’s really disgusting.” To which Jean Seberg replies, “What does that mean, disgusting?” How cool an ending is that? A few years ago, I visited the very spot where this iconic scene was shot.Rue Campagne-Première once was home to artists like Man Ray, Modigliani, Tsuguharu Foujita, and Eugène Atget. The corner where Michel fell is quite ordinary, but I lingered there, moved by the atmosphere.
 In Paris, I visited many film locations. There’s Rue Daguerre in Montparnasse, where Agnès Varda filmed Daguerréotypes, and where poet Mitsuharu Kaneko once lived in poverty.

 I also strolled along the Canal Saint-Martin, where Audrey Tautou skipped stones in Amélie. Along the same canal still stands the Hotel du Nord, after which the classic film was named. Its melancholic facade is simply beautiful.
 And then there’s the Pont Neuf, where the homeless Alex lived in the Lovers on the Bridge, the Saint-Étienne-du-Mont church where the time-traveling taxi arrives in Midnight in Paris, and the Saint-Sulpice church from The Da Vinci Code. In Paris, it seems like every corner is a film setting.
 Of all the places I visited, the most poignant was the site of Breathless’s final scene. Jean Seberg, who once asked, “What does that mean, disgusting?” now rests nearby at Montparnasse Cemetery. Paris is simply too romantic.

カンパーニュ・プルミエール通りにあるマン・レイの家。

「北ホテル」の舞台になったホテル。

モンパルナス墓地にある
ジーン・セヴァーグのお墓。