3 Best Sights in Paris, France

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We've compiled the best of the best in Paris - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Bercy Village

Bercy

The cobbled streets and picturesque stone pavillons that once housed Paris’s thriving 19th-century wine trade were restored in the 1990s and repurposed as a charming shopping and dining district. Brimming with unique and French chain boutiques and lively cafés, bars, and a multiplex Pathé cinema, this is a great place to spend a few hours strolling, snacking, shopping, and lingering till evening for dinner and a movie, especially since shops and bars stay open late. Check out the website for seasonal activities for kids.

Hôtel Drouot

Grands Boulevards

Hidden away in a small antiques district, not far from the Opéra Garnier, is Paris's central auction house, said to be the oldest in the world. You name it, Drouot sells it: vintage clothes, haute-couture gowns, tchotchkes, ornate Chinese lacquered boxes, rare books, art, rugs and tapestries, mid-century modern furniture, old master drawings, wine, and much more. Anyone can attend the sales and viewings, which draw a mix of art dealers, ladies who lunch, and art amateurs hoping to discover an unknown masterpiece. Check the website to see what's on the block or if you're pressed for time, bid online. Don't miss the small galleries and antiques dealers in the Quartier Drouot, a warren of small streets around the auction house, notably on Rues Rossini and de la Grange-Batelière.

9 rue Drouot, Paris, 75009, France
01–48–00–20–20
Sight Details
Free
Closed Sun.

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Studio 28

Montmartre

This little movie house has a distinguished history. When it opened in 1928, it was the first theater in the world purposely built for art et essai, or experimental film, and Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí's L'Age d'Or caused a riot when it premiered here. Through the years artists and writers came to see "seventh art" creations by directors such as Jean Cocteau, François Truffaut, and Orson Welles. Today it's a repertory cinema, showing first-runs, just-runs, and previews—usually in their original language. Movies are screened beginning at 2 pm daily, and tickets cost €11. In the back of the movie house is a cozy bar and café that has a quiet outdoor terrace decorated with murals of film stars. Oh, and those charmingly bizarre chandeliers in the salle? Cocteau designed them.

10 rue Tholozé, Paris, 75018, France
01–46–06–47–45
Sight Details
Movie tickets €11

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