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Playtime
Plot Synopsis by Keith Phipps

Arriving nearly a decade after Mon Oncle, Playtime continues the adventures of M. Hulot. More than a decade seems to have passed since its predecessor, however. The colorful Paris of Mon Oncle, last seen being slowly chipped away by progress, has now vanished almost entirely. Playtime takes as its setting an ultra-modern Paris where familiar landmarks appear only as fleeting reflections in the new buildings of glass and steel. Alternating between Hulot and a group of American tourists, Tati exploits the chaos just below the overly ordered surface of this brave new world. Again moving from one nearly wordless episode to another, Tati sends his alter ego off to make an appointment in a whirring, featureless office complex. He subsequently moves on to an exhibition of new inventions, meets an old friend at an aquarium-like apartment, wreaks havoc in a snooty new restaurant, and, again, almost falls in love. The most ambitious and technically complex of the Hulot films, it proved unprofitable and helped usher in the financial difficulties that would plague Tati late in life before later getting the recognition it enjoys today.

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Similar Works
À Nous la Liberté  (1931, René Clair)
Jour De Fête  (1949, Jacques Tati)
Modern Times  (1936, Charles Chaplin)
Mr. Hulot's Holiday  (1953, Jacques Tati)
Mr. Bean [TV Series] 
Cours Du Soir  (1967, Jacques Tati)
Other Related Works
 Is followed by:    Trafic  (1971, Jacques Tati)
 Is preceded by:    Mon Oncle  (1958, Jacques Tati)
 Influenced:    The Iceberg  (2005, Dominique Abel, Bruno Romy, Fiona Gordon)