I agree with many of your posts above.
I don’t think Nora learned from her experiences either. She has to find comfort in herself & learn to be happy alone...or at least be somewhat content. Also, I feel that by staying in Paris, she is running away from her problems. She quit her job, leaves her friends & family, & leaves a city she has known her whole life. Maybe she should have focused on finding a job that she really liked & found satisfaction in that.
The ending makes it seem that Julien is the only answer to her ultimate happiness & that’s not true at all, and is a very poor message to send out.
As a single 30something female in NYC, I related to this movie in many ways. I enjoyed this film until the very end. I didn’t like the happy cliché ending where she ends up with the sexy French guy. It was EXTREMELY unrealistic.
Here are some endings I would have preferred.
1) On the train, as she walks closer to him, she realizes she was mistaken & it's NOT Julien. She then gets off at the airport & goes back to NYC.
2) It IS him on the train, but she smiles at him & gets off at the airport (as someone else mentioned above)
3) She has a drink with him & after speaking with him, gets her closure, and then leaves to catch her train.
4) Once back in NYC, she bumps into that blind date guy & he apologizes to her for their date. He says that he’s finally over his ex & wants to take Nora out again. I believe that would have been more realistic than ending up with Julien.
reply
share