A Frenchly Honest review, as told by MaisOui Le Frenchy.
The…read morerooftop bar is among the most reliable disappointments in modern hospitality. The formula is well established: procure a view of sufficient grandeur, install some ambient lighting and a cocktail menu inflated to reflect the altitude, and allow the panorama to do all the work while the staff does precisely nothing. One learns, after a certain number of such establishments, to lower one's expectations to a level that cannot be further lowered.
And then, occasionally, one returns.
I have been to Le Dantès Skylounge before. I came back -- which, for those who know me, is not a gesture I make lightly. A cynic does not repeat an experience unless the first has given him genuine reason. It had.
Le Dantès, perched above Marseille with the entirety of the Vieux-Port spread below -- the marina's masts, the ancient stones of Fort Saint-Jean, the city climbing into the hills under a sky that has no business being that blue -- does not follow the formula. And on this visit, as on the last, it proved the point.
It was busy when we arrived. This is the first test of any establishment worth considering, and many fail it before a single word is spoken. I stepped outside to assess the terrace. I was greeted immediately. Not eventually. Not once a staff member had concluded a conversation of no discernible importance. Immediately. A table would be ready shortly -- and shortly, here, meant shortly. I returned inside to collect my party. Before I had said a single word to them, a staff member had already approached to inquire whether they needed anything. Attentiveness, it appears, requires no instruction at Le Dantès. One wishes the same could be said of the Capian Bar at the InterContinental Hôtel-Dieu, a short walk away, where the view of the same Vieux-Port comes with prices that would make a Parisian blush and service that would make him feel considerably better about Paris.
We sat. Blankets appeared -- offered without theatre, accepted with gratitude. An indoor table was proposed, should we prefer shelter from the wind. We did not. The Vieux-Port in the golden hour does not invite retreat.
Now -- the drinks. Yes, they are priced accordingly. Let us not pretend otherwise. An espresso martini, an Irish coffee, a third cocktail whose name escapes me but whose execution most certainly did not -- none of these will be confused with budget refreshments. But here is what is included in that price, and what so many establishments charge for without delivering: quality ingredients, properly made. A terrace that is genuinely clean. A view that is actually yours to enjoy, because the staff has ensured you are settled, warm, and looked after. At the Capian Bar, one pays a comparable sum and is left to wonder what, precisely, one is paying for.
What Le Dantès understands -- and what its more self-satisfied neighbours conspicuously do not -- is that a view is a backdrop, not a service. The Vieux-Port will always be magnificent. The question is whether anyone is paying attention behind the bar.
Here, they are. Again.