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Emily in Paris star Lucas Bravo says he partly agrees with criticism of ‘cliched’ Netflix show

‘We’re portraying cliches and we’re portraying one single vision of Paris,’ actor said

Adam White
Monday 12 October 2020 06:01 EDT
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Emily in Paris - Official Trailer

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Emily in Paris star Lucas Bravo has revealed he agrees “in a way” with French critics of the show, suggesting that the Netflix hit “portrays cliches”.

The series stars Lily Collins as an American expat who travels to Paris and becomes an Instagram sensation.

Despite being a hit for Netflix, the show has drawn poor reviews from French critics. One such critic claimed that the show is “insulting” to Parisians.

Bravo, who portrays Collins’s French love interest Gabriel, can understand why there is some criticism of the show.

“I think they’re right, in a way,” Bravo told Cosmopolitan. “We’re portraying cliches and we’re portraying one single vision of Paris. Paris is one of the most diverse cities in the world. We have so many ways of thinking, so many different nationalities, so many different neighbourhoods. A lifetime wouldn't be enough to know everything that’s going on in Paris.”

He continued: “At some point, if you want to tell a story about Paris, you have to choose an angle. You have to choose a vision. French critics, they didn’t understand the fact that it’s just one vision. They’re like, ‘Oh, this is not what Paris is.’ Of course. Paris is many things.”

While Emily in Paris has been condemned by critics in both the UK and the US, the French have been among the most appalled by it.

Charles Martin, writing for Première, said that the show depicted the French as “all mean and all lazy and [whom] never arrive at the office before late morning; and that they are incorrigible flirts with no concept of being faithful. [They’re] sexist, backward and, of course, have at best a fitful relationship with their showers”.

“It reduces the capital’s inhabitants to vile snobs sporting Birkin handbags who light up a cigarette the minute they’re out of the gym,” MadmoiZelle wrote in its review.

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