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The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon
S1.E3
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IMDbPro

Paris Sera Toujours Paris

  • Episode aired Sep 24, 2023
  • TV-MA
  • 48m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
Romain Levi in Paris Sera Toujours Paris (2023)
DramaHorror

The group arrives in Paris, Isabelle confronts her past while getting closer to Daryl; Codron seeks help from the leader of a growing nationalist movement called Pouvoir, putting the Union o... Read allThe group arrives in Paris, Isabelle confronts her past while getting closer to Daryl; Codron seeks help from the leader of a growing nationalist movement called Pouvoir, putting the Union of Hope and Laurent under dangerous scrutiny.The group arrives in Paris, Isabelle confronts her past while getting closer to Daryl; Codron seeks help from the leader of a growing nationalist movement called Pouvoir, putting the Union of Hope and Laurent under dangerous scrutiny.

  • Director
    • Tim Southam
  • Writers
    • Robert Kirkman
    • Tony Moore
    • Charlie Adlard
  • Stars
    • Norman Reedus
    • Clémence Poésy
    • Louis Puech Scigliuzzi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tim Southam
    • Writers
      • Robert Kirkman
      • Tony Moore
      • Charlie Adlard
    • Stars
      • Norman Reedus
      • Clémence Poésy
      • Louis Puech Scigliuzzi
    • 18User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos26

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    Top cast27

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    Norman Reedus
    Norman Reedus
    • Daryl Dixon
    Clémence Poésy
    Clémence Poésy
    • Isabelle Carrière
    Louis Puech Scigliuzzi
    Louis Puech Scigliuzzi
    • Laurent Carrière
    Laïka Blanc-Francard
    Laïka Blanc-Francard
    • Sylvie
    Anne Charrier
    Anne Charrier
    • Marion Genet
    Romain Levi
    Romain Levi
    • Stéphane Codron
    Adam Nagaitis
    Adam Nagaitis
    • Quinn
    Eriq Ebouaney
    Eriq Ebouaney
    • Fallou Boukar
    Lukerya Ilyashenko
    Lukerya Ilyashenko
    • Anna Valery
    François Delaive
    François Delaive
    • Dr. Lafleur
    Dominique Pinon
    Dominique Pinon
    • Antoine
    Tristan Zanchi
    • Emile
    Hugo Bardin
    Hugo Bardin
    • Coco
    • (as Hugo Bardin aka Paloma)
    Sabine Pakora
    • Sonia
    Éric Frey
    • The Conductor
    Naïa Pichler
    • Aimée
    • (as Naia Pichler)
    Chrystal Boursin
    • Nadine
    Elie Haddad
    Elie Haddad
    • Bastien
    • Director
      • Tim Southam
    • Writers
      • Robert Kirkman
      • Tony Moore
      • Charlie Adlard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.54.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5roberthys-47582

    Fear The Walking Dead S8 is better

    Fear The Walking Dead is better mainly the acting,visuals,make-up,editing and camera filter don't understand why this and Dead City receive so many high ratings while Fear TWD final seasons receive so much massive hate the TWD fanbase is beyond sick and these IMDB ratings should be completely ignored...worse than critic reviews!

    Fear The Walking Dead is better don't understand why this and Dead City receive so many high ratings while Fear TWD final seasons receive so much massive hate the TWD fanbase is beyond sick and these IMDB ratings should be completely ignored...worse than critic reviews!
    1fanou-98703

    Paris restera toujours Paris

    Oh so after 12 years, Paris underground life is still on; that is terrific but likely not possible. We have seen in TWD that all ressources are gone but not in Paris, France. Of course not. Champagne and candies for the kids. Energy and water are free but not for everybody. Funny to see that the upper class leave in the basement and the lower class leaves outside.

    The new bad guys are caricaturals as hell. We don't believe any minite that these people could have survived the fall. They just over act and this is really anoying.

    But do not worry God will help the good ones to prevail against the bad ones.
    7fernandoschiavi

    If in the first episodes we had those medieval inspirations, now everything here has a foot in the contemporary, especially in the nightclub block

    After a brief stop in Angers, including a bizarre zombie orchestra performing Boléro, Daryl's group finally reaches Paris. There, after a poignant encounter with a little girl - now a zombie - who used to be Isabelle's neighbor, they meet a community led by a man named Fallou. With their help, Daryl seeks out information on a ship that can return him to America, which leads the group to the Demimonde nightclub and a reunion with Isabelle's ex-boyfriend Quinn. Quinn reveals that he is Laurent's father and demands that Isabelle and Laurent stay with him in exchange for his help. Daryl rejects the deal and prepares to set out on his own after an argument with Isabelle, leading to Laurent running away after overhearing them. Codron meets with Genet, who agrees to let him lead the search for Daryl while her people continue experimenting with walkers. Pouvoir attacks Fallou's community and Isabelle searches for Laurent, while Daryl falls through a roof following a brutal fight with Codron.

    Continuing Daryl's mission to return home, he and his companions need to cross Paris. As soon as they arrive, we meet a group that has developed in the outskirts of the city of light. I'm really enjoying the way the series is portraying Paris, which since the last episode has been approached as a character apart from the series, showing that the city functions - obviously differently - even after the end of the world. The scale and proportion that the technical aspects are taking in this spin-off are exceptional. Simply cinematic. As for the new group shown here, it's what I say every episode: another generic community that doesn't add to the story, except for making Laurent help a grieving woman, which further enhances the belief that the boy is the new Messiah. The leader of the community even shows to be an interesting character, leading the group to a place where Daryl can get the boat to return to the United States. This character was a great addition to the series' cast, and I genuinely hope he returns in future episodes.

    Upon arriving at this new location, we discover that Isabelle's ex-husband, Quinn, is Laurent's father, which means he had a relationship with both sisters. I didn't expect anything from this character to reappear (since he was shown as a supporting character in the previous episode) and even less that he would be the boy's father. On the other hand, it seems that this hook left will play a relevant role in the development of the relationship between Isabelle and Laurent, as she now has one more thing to hide from the boy. Hopefully, this will have an impact on the plot and not just be an irrelevant revelation that leads nowhere.

    Another scene that caught my attention here in this episode was the moment Isabelle returns to her old home with Daryl. The dialogue and similarities between the two characters create a chemistry between them in a surprisingly quick way, but enough to make us attach to them. With this character's growth and The Walking Dead's history of killing off characters just as they're growing, unfortunately, it is possible that her death will occur at the end of the season.

    The scene of the walkers falling from the building and resisting shows the danger of the variants, which have been the great attraction of this series. However, what stands out most in this sequence is the walker child Aimeé, who was Isabelle's neighbor. Before the world fell - as shown in the previous episode - Isabelle didn't want to talk about what was happening to not scare the girl. When we see Isabelle leaving the building to leave Paris, she is looking at the little girl, and her concern about what could happen to the girl is clear - and it happens. This even shows a different approach since we rarely see walker children in all the productions of the universe. Here we see again the issue of experiments with the variants, now with an agile and strong walker, who can easily break free from chains. It is still uncertain whether these variants will actually become troublesome at some point or if they will remain only in these isolated samples, but it is really exciting to see these new walkers, and this ends up giving a breath to the franchise.

    But overall, the feeling is of an arbitrary story. If in the first episodes we had those medieval inspirations, now everything here has a foot in the contemporary, especially in the nightclub block. The series' language is random, even in the way the characters' journey is not well delineated, because at one moment they are going somewhere, at another they change their minds, one moment Daryl wants a radio, the next he wants to help Isabelle get a photo of her sister... I understand the appreciation for a more intimate chapter, but better dialogues and a dramaturgy with weight are lacking for the conversations between Daryl and Isabelle to gain emotion.

    Furthermore, I am having difficulty understanding the characters' arcs. Daryl seems like a visitor on the adventure, doing what they ask of him and serving as a leader whenever danger comes, but we haven't had any development that advances or makes us reflect on the character's traumas and past events, or any element that shows any kind of evolution. It's the same old Daryl. As for Isabelle, she is a compilation of generic elements from the franchise, and Laurent, well, so far this chosen prophet metaphor doesn't make much sense, and these suggestions that he is special are insufficient to create any dramatic interest in the story.
    6vaklavkoca

    Kind of illogical

    I'm liking the show overall so far because I really like Daryl. But I feel like this episode and the previous one have the same problem. Both episodes have a community that seems just completely illogical to exist in the apocalypse. In the previous episode there was a pre-school who somehow survived. This episode has a nightclub with electricity and everything powering lights and mics in the catacombs beneath Paris. How does a preschooler fight off a zombie? How does a community survive in the middle of Paris? How do they get food? How are they getting water? It makes the zombies seem very trivialized. Like these pre-schoolers have survived. These people are surviving so easily that they are running a nightclub. There's a dude who made a zombie orchestra...Like it really trivializes the struggles that Rick's group went through. If a pre-schooler can survive so easily, why couldn't the characters in the walking dead? Overall I'm liking Daryl and his relationship with the female lead and the kid, but I wish the writers would think more about how these communities can exist in the walking dead universe.
    4Nitro90000

    TWD to Snorefest

    I have been a fan of the original show since the start. While some of the others such as fear and Tales have there plus and minuses, this one has but one good quality, Norman Reedus. If it wasn't for him, I would have given up on this show a while ago. Problem number one, boring as heck. They are trying to put far to much substance into a show about zombies. I don't care about most of the characters, a lesson that TWD has taught us several times. Two, I don't believe that I should need to know French in order to watch this show. Most of the interactions are not subtitled and they loose me with what little plot they have. They need to call this Walking Dead Europe, please watch our show.

    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When the group arrives in Paris and passes by Jim Morrison's grave, in Pere Lachaise, the song playing is C'est Étrange by Philonico. It is the French version of "People Are Strange" from The Doors' 1967 album "Strange Days." Morrison was the lead singer of The Doors. The inscription on the tombstone reads "KATA TON DAIMONA EAYTOY," which translates to "true to his own spirit."
    • Goofs
      There is a reason Daryl has not been stabbing walkers when there is only a few at a time. Since these walkers have acid in their blood getting close to them is riskier as they can burn with a simple touch, plus it would likely degrade the blade of a knife. Also with access to black powder rifles ammo isn't as scarce, as black powder is fairly easy to make.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Isabelle Carrière: This is the town of Angers. We can radio from here and get directions on where we should head next.

    • Soundtracks
      C'est étrange
      (uncredited)

      Written by Jim Morrison and Robby Krieger and The Doors

      Performed by Philonico

      [French cover of "People Are Strange" plays during Paris scenes]

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 24, 2023 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Filming locations
      • Catacombs of Paris - 1 Av. du Colonel Henri Rol-Tanguy, 75014 Paris, France(Fallou takes Daryl, Isabelle, Sylvie and Laurent through the Catacombs)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 48m
    • Color
      • Color

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