I think any other country's politics are necessarily more 'modern' in their approach.
This is mainly because they lack the centuries-old courtesies that are the form in our Houses - referring to members as 'My (Right) Honourable Friend ...' even though friendship is actually not something that's felt by the member speaking.
Similarly, routing all comments through the chair is a tradition that can often take the worst stings out of exchanges, and I for one think they are a good idea.
Other parliaments, uncluttered by such old-fashioned processes, can get down to the serious shouting and insulting far more easily.
But what makes politics interesting the world over is personalities - or the lack of them in the case of recent Labour leaders, and that is what makes France's current power struggle something to observe.