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Lagu Ost Love In Paris 2

Lagu Ost Love In Paris 2 3,8/5 6157 votes

He meets Jennifer 'Jenny' Cavalleri, a quick-witted, working-class Radcliffe College student of classical music; they quickly fall in love despite their differences. When Jenny reveals her plans to study in Paris, Oliver is upset that he does not figure in those plans. He proposes, she accepts, and they travel to the Barrett. This is not my own song Singer: Sammy Simorangkir Title: Kau Harus Bahagia Directed & Edited Clip.

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United States Language English Budget $30 million Box office $103.3 million Rugrats in Paris: The Movie is a 2000 American film based on the. It is the sequel to 1998's and the second film in the. In the film, Chuckie Finster takes the lead character role as he searches to find a new mother. The film marks the only appearance of two villains in the Rugrats franchise, Coco LaBouche, a cruel woman who hates children, including babies, and her accomplice, Jean-Claude. The film also marks the first appearance of new Rugrats character Kimi Finster, and her mother,. The film was released in the United States on November 17, 2000, and grossed $103.3 million worldwide. Contents.

Plot The film opens with a parody of 's 1972 film at the wedding reception of Lou Pickles and his new wife, Lulu (his first wife Trixie, the mother of Stu and Drew, died before the series began). A mother-child dance during the reception saddens, who realizes that he has lived over two years of his life without his mother, who died of an illness shortly after he was born.

His father, Chas, shares Chuckie's loneliness. ' father, is summoned to EuroReptarland, a Japanese amusement park in, to fix a malfunctioning robot. Tommy, Chuckie, their dog, and all their parents travel to Paris to take a vacation at the park. Coco LaBouche, the cold-hearted, child-hating head of EuroReptarland, yearns to be the president of the entire Reptar franchise and its parent company, Yamaguchi Industries, after her employer, Mr. Yamaguchi, reveals his plans to retire as president. Yamaguchi says that his successor has to love children to be able to do the job, so LaBouche lies to him by claiming to be engaged to a man with a child. Upon the Rugrats' arrival at EuroReptarland, Angelica overhears a conversation between Coco and Yamaguchi before being caught.

To save herself, Angelica reveals that Chas is looking for a wife and suggests that Coco him. Coco strikes up a relationship with Chas, but her attempts to bond with Chuckie fail. The adults and babies meet Coco's overworked assistant and her daughter, who hail from Japan, but are now living in France.

Kira helps LaBouche to win Chas' affections. Meanwhile, Spike gets lost in the streets of Paris and falls in love with a stray poodle named Fifi. Kira tells the babies the origins of Reptar, explaining he was a feared monster until a princess revealed his gentler side to make the frightened humans like him.

Chuckie decides the princess should be his new mother, and is aided by his friends to reach an animatronic replica of the princess in the park, but they are stopped by Coco's ninja security guards. At the show's premiere, Angelica informs Coco of Chuckie's wish, so Coco sneaks backstage and takes the spotlight as the princess, luring Chuckie into her arms to make her seem wonderful with children. Chas is ecstatic, deciding she would make an excellent mother and decides on the spot to marry her. On her wedding day, Coco, aided by her accomplice Jean-Claude, kidnaps the children and traps them in a warehouse, including Angelica. Kira confronts Coco about deceiving Chas and Chuckie and she throws her out of the limo. Chuckie rallies the children to crash his father's wedding at the using the Reptar robot. They are chased by Jean-Claude, who pilots Reptar's nemesis, the Robosnail robot.

The chase culminates in a fight on a bridge, and Chuckie knocks Robosnail into the River. Chuckie crashes the wedding, and Coco pretends to be happy to see Chuckie, but Jean-Claude bursts in and accidentally reveals Coco's true nature by announcing that her kidnapping plot had failed.

Chas, seeing Coco for the liar she truly is, calls the wedding off. Angelica reveals Coco's plans to Yamaguchi, who is also in attendance, and the former president fires Coco from EuroReptarland for her treachery. When Coco tries to leave, she realizes the babies are on her wedding train and angrily yanks them off in front of everyone. Angelica, as Coco leaves the church, stomps on the wedding dress and rips it, revealing her underwear.

Loves In Paris Tx

Spike chases the humiliated and defeated Coco from the church with Jean-Claude in tow. Kira arrives at the church to return Chuckie's bear having been thrown out of the limo earlier and apologizes to Chas for what Coco did to him and Chuckie. Chas and Kira eventually fall in love with each other and get married upon returning to. Spike's new girlfriend, Fifi, is adopted by the Finster family. Chuckie gets Kira as a new mother, and Kimi as a new sister. Cast Main. as Coco LaBouche.

as Jean-Claude. as Mr. ' Released: July 25, 2000. ' Released: November 5, 2000. ' Released: February 27, 2001 Soundtrack Review scores Source Rating A soundtrack for the film, titled Rugrats in Paris: The Movie: Music From the Motion Picture was released on November 7, 2000 on. Like the last soundtrack, it also contains an enhanced part: the theme song to the film 'Jazzy Rugrat Love'.

Title Artist(s) Length 1. 'You Don't Stand a Chance' 3:44 3. 'Life Is a Party' 3:26 4.

'Final Heartbreak' 3:42 6. 'When You Love' 5:18 7. 'I'm Telling You This' No Authority 4:08 8. 'Chuckie Chan (Martial Arts Expert of Reptarland)' & Alex Brown 4:19 10.

'I Want a Mom That Will Last Forever' 3:47 12. 'Excuse My French' 3:03 13.

' & The Sumos 4:05 Bonus enhanced track on enhanced CD No. Title Artist(s) Length 14. 'Jazzy Rugrat Love' (Theme from Rugrats in Paris) 5:07 Total length: 50:55 Release The film was released on November 17, 2000, and grossed $103,291,131 worldwide from a $30 million budget. In the United States, it grossed $22,718,184 in its opening weekend for an average of $7,743 from 2,934 venues.

In the United Kingdom, dethroned Rugrats in Paris to #3, thus placing it behind Bridget Jones and. Home media released the film on and on March 27, 2001. In 2009, Paramount released the film via and the. On March 15, 2011, Rugrats in Paris, as well as and, were re-released on a three disc trilogy collection. On August 29, 2017, Rugrats in Paris was re-released again on DVD.

Reception gives the film a 75% approval rating from critics based on 73 reviews. The critical consensus reads: 'When the Rugrats go to Paris, the result is Nickelodeon-style fun. The plot is effectively character-driven, and features catchy songs and great celebrity voice-acting.' Metacritic gives a film a 62/100 based on 25 reviews, indicating 'generally favorable reviews'. This is the most critically acclaimed Rugrats film to date. Sequel A third installment, entitled, was released on June 13, 2003, featuring the characters from.

References. Retrieved May 16, 2015. IMDb.com Inc. Archived from on April 1, 2014.

I Love Paris Youtube

Retrieved June 17, 2014. Retrieved June 20, 2017.

Lagu Ost Love In Paris 2

Rauzi, Robin (November 17, 2000). Los Angeles Times.

Retrieved August 24, 2010. Liana Jonas. Retrieved May 16, 2015.

Retrieved November 13, 2010. Welkos, Robert W. (November 28, 2000). Retrieved November 13, 2010. 18 April 2001. Retrieved 23 January 2017.

Mitchell, Elvis (November 17, 2000). Archived from on July 20, 2012. Retrieved August 24, 2010. Willdorf, Nina (November 16, 2000).

The Boston Phoenix. Archived from on July 8, 2011. Retrieved August 24, 2010.

Retrieved August 25, 2010. November 17, 2000. Retrieved May 16, 2015. Retrieved May 16, 2015. External links.

The city of Paris – and all the magnificent cultural baggage that goes along with it – has always been a hot topic of debate across every artistic medium, so it’s no surprise that there have been so many thousands of pop and jazz songs written about the French capital. Which is all well and good, but very few such songs have managed to stick their heads above the crowd and capture the real essence of life in the city, nor what it actually is that makes it such a magnet for tourists. From wide-eyed foreign visitors to nostalgic, subversive and even angry locals, here are the twenty best Paris songs according to us. You can use the comments box below to tell us all the classics that we missed.

First recorded in 1965, this classic of the chanson genre is both a tribute to the Armenian-French singer’s upbringing in Montmartre and a lament to the changing face of his beloved neighbourhood. Aznavour’s signature song – which would become an international hit, thanks to, and re-recordings – is an adieu to the long-gone days of real, villagey, bohemian Montmartre. In it, he remembers a hungry yet contented childhood spent toiling away at artworks in this northern area of Paris, which has today, in parts, become a victim of its own success. Although it has nothing on the original, also check out from Chilean composer-producer Nicolas Jaar, which does a decent job of transposing Aznavour’s nostalgia and melancholy to the dance floor.

The hip-hop duo comprising JoeyStarr and Kool Shen – who some consider the Godfathers of French rap – showed real signs of genius on their third album, the provocatively titled ‘Paris Sous les Bombes’ (‘bombes’ being a reference to the Aerosol cans used by the duo’s graffiti artist friends). Notorious for rubbing the authorities up the wrong way, the two rappers tackle gang life in the Seine-Saint-Denis banlieues. On the title track, they reminisce about adrenaline-fuelled nights spent spray-painting their neighbourhood walls, with plenty of shout-outs to graffiti gangs like the Funky COP and the 93 crew. Working in an ingenious sample of Eric B and Rakim’s, renowned hip-hop producer Lucien lays down a sinister, infectious funk of a beat, while Starr and Shen fire creepy whispered rhymes over the top.

Vincent Cotto and Jean Rodor wrote the original way back in 1913, but the song only really came into its own when English verses were added by lyricist Dorcas Cochran four decades later. Although recordings were subsequently taped with the likes of and Vera Lynn (among others), it’s Eartha Kitt’s exquisitely recorded version that really stands out. Set to a backing of accordion-mimicking orchestral flourishes and a swaying nursery-rhyme lilt, Kitt’s quirky yet soulful voice is at its most striking. Lyrically, couplets like ‘How would you like to be / down by the Seine with me’ are timeless, and have no doubt inspired countless real life lovers to head to the quais.

Love

In 2006, American musician Annie Clark was busy leading a double life as touring guitarist extraordinaire for the likes of Sufjan Stevens and the Polyphonic Spree and as mysterious solo artist under the moniker St. Vincent, making dark indie-pop out of her bedroom on rudimentary DIY software. A good six or seven years before she became the critical art-rock darling and massive crossover star she is today, debut album ‘Marry Me’ was a dark, brave and ornately composed work that contained many of the hallmarks of her later material but that was largely overlooked at the time. At its centre lies ‘Paris is Burning’, a downbeat waltz with a martial vibe and a dizzying array of guitar sounds that describes an underclass revolt in the city – perhaps in reference to the Paris Commune of 1871.

The image of such a wondrous city in flames also works as a metaphor for something more relatable, like struggling to get out of a destructive relationship. Following his lengthy 1999 world tour, the late, great Elliott Smith settled down in Paris for a few months. Every so often, B-sides and ‘lost songs’ of Smith’s seem to appear out of nowhere – most likely stored away on personal four-track recorders or in mysterious record label vaults – and one of the best of these forgotten demos stems from his time spent in Paris.

The 9th arrondissement square at the foot of Montmartre – the ‘Place Pigalle’ – provides the charming setting and the subject is a fleeting relationship he had with a French girl on this ‘temporary half-holiday’. Recorded just before the release of his final and most successful album ‘Figure 8’, the track is a tender, string-laden rumination on love in a foreign city. ‘Je rappe so easily’, he says in a fluid Franglais. It’s exactly the kind of self-aggrandising remark we’ve come to expect from the biggest star in contemporary French rap, who in this song imagines himself watching over the sprawling city and its western suburbs. Referred to familiarly as ‘Paname’, Paris is Booba’s dominion, and on this track he exalts the city, himself and his lifestyle, while also not forgetting to ridicule his critics. With bits of Arabic and Senegalese dropped in here and there, the profoundly dark lyrics are shot through with braggadocio, comparing his flow to a gunshot and boasting that he’s so rich you’d think he's a narco-trafficker. But it’s not just a personal display of power – the chorus, after all, contains a very explicit political message.

For him, Front National leader Marine Le Pen represents the scourge-like ‘racaille’ (‘trash’ or ‘vermin’) of the French state, which is his response to a heinous comment the politician once made about immigrants. Though never mentioned by name, entertainment mogul David Geffen is the subject of this highlight from Mitchell’s jazzy ‘Court and Spark’ album. A friend of hers in the early 1970s, ‘free man’ Geffen was the top dog at Asylum Records at the time and he had made his thoughts and feelings about the job perfectly clear when the pair holidayed together in Paris. It was only when travelling around the French capital that he felt free from the constraints and demands of his role, as Mitchell’s trilling refrain describes: ‘I’m a free man in Paris / I felt unfettered and alive / there was nobody calling me up for favours / and no one’s future to decide’. Sung from Mitchell’s lips but from Geffen’s perspective, many consider the song to convey a strong message of empowerment for young women. The best version is this live rendition from the ‘Shadows and Light’ show, which has Jaco Pastorius doing his mesmerising jazz bass thing in the background. This straightforwardly-named songbook standard was written by famed songwriter Cole Porter in 1953 and later performed by names as diverse as, and.

But nothing tops Ella Fitzgerald’s magical take, which appears on her 1956 album ‘Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Cole Porter Songbook’. The song is as simple as homages go, with Paris simply a symbol of enduring beauty: ‘I love Paris every moment / every moment of the year / I love Paris, why oh why do I love Paris / because my love is near’.

Fitzgerald’s brilliantly produced session puts her impeccable phrasing and clarity of tone at the fore, while the between-verse big band passages are as sweet as they are stately. Back in 1973, following turns as a producer for the likes of the Stooges and Nico, a couple of iffy solo albums, and having just co-founded one of the world’s most important ever rock bands in the Velvet Underground, legendary avant-gardist John Cale put out possibly the most accessible album of his career. Met with shamefully little fanfare, ‘Paris 1919’ was the classically trained musician’s first and only foray into sweetly melodic baroque pop, packed full with luscious horns, strings and simple piano phrasings.

In stark contrast to the upbeat feel of the arrangements, his playful, Dada-inspired lyrics were far from straightforward, with the whole album being described by many as a bizarre reimagining of the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. Kicking off side B, the astonishing title track is best read as merely impressionistic, Cale’s musings intended to evoke an atmosphere and not to be taken at face value.