Somehow I missed the news that Eric Rohmer died earlier this month. Rohmer was a part of that movement of critics-turned-directors that we call the French New Wave, but while most of his Cahiers comrades came from the left, Rohmer was deeply conservative. As Victor Morton writes in National Review,
Rohmer is one of the few directors (Whit Stillman is another) who make films about how being "a free spirit" or "following your heart" might not be good ideas; that some things matter more than your desires. Chloe in the Afternoon is a kind of Gallic Brief Encounter, and the comparison speaks volumes about differing attitudes toward adultery, especially since Rohmer's film doesn't adopt the latitudinarian wink of the easy French stereotype. Indeed, the whole drama relies on the tension between Chloe's frank attempts to seduce the married hero Frederic and his willingness to be wooed because he doesn't want to be thought of as a prude. Rohmer's greatest film, My Night With Maud, is also the one where religion is most obviously present and relevant. It starts with a lengthy scene at a Mass, hero Jean-Louis is unambiguously identified as a devout Catholic, and both of these are presented as normal. Jean-Louis and the divorced Maud wind up spending the night, but he insists on accommodations against the occasion of sin. That don't work…exactly…
There is a branch of right-wing movie criticism that consists of complaints that the cinema needs more clear-cut heroes, unencumbered by the ambiguities of real life. Rohmer represents a much more mature conservatism: He made films about flawed people struggling with sin and temptation, characters he portrayed with empathy but also with a clear-eyed view of the consequences of their choices. He ultimately belongs to the same humanist tradition as Renoir, Kurosawa, or Truffaut, but with a Tory Catholic perspective that gives his tales their distinctive flavor. If you haven't seen his work before, the best place to begin may be My Night at Maud's, which initially appears to be built around a dialogue between a Christian and his Marxist friend but soon reveals a story in which none of the central characters are entirely able to live up to their stated beliefs.
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Let's place bets. If Suki gets here first it will be comparisons to Avatar. I think SugarFree will be something obscure that only Naga has read, but if Naga is first it will be Star Wars . . .
Interesting fun fact via Wikipedia. The director's surname Rohmer was a pseudonym based on the name ofFu Manchu writer Sax Rohmer, which was itself a nom de plume.
I saw One, Two, Three yesterday. I hadn't seen it since I was a child. It wasn't as funny as I remembered, but it's probably doesn't pull any punches in bashing communism. Not sure how much that had to do with Billy Wilder's politics or the fact it was a big ad for Coca Cola.
I liked Rohmer's epic (I can't remember the name) about a disfunctional, borderline-anarchistic group of Americans who, with a Russian interloper, bristle at and yet adapt to their unlikely alliance with parts of the U.S. military-industrial complex in an effort to thwart a huge meteor heading to devastate Earth. Rohmer got nuanced performances out of Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler and Bruce Willis in that.
Well, if you can find another cinematographer who has done more hard work exposing the inherent dangers of creating and/or utilizing mechanized, weaponized, multifunctional (read: covert) and sentient automatons for the purposes of waging clandestine war on civilian targets (e.g. Shia LaBeouf), I'd like to know about it, smart guy.
Robot Jox? Please. Completely different angle on the subject.
In addition to starring Gary Graham, widely regarded as the poor man's Bruce Greenwood, that movie totally pandered to the sophmoric sensibilites of the teenage movie goers straight-to-VHS renters of the time. Plus, if I remember the "plot" correctly, the robot combat was used as surrogate for warfare, not to facilitate it. And, it was a public spectacle. And, not one of Gordon's robots mutated with any plausibility into a Ford Mustang.
Next up: Directors whose films discuss in a thoughtful way the vulnerabilities of transporting a large group of convicted felons from one point of incarceration to another via cargo planes, and the dangers that practice poses to Nicolas Cage.
Okay. I can see some of us are not interested in having an earnest discussion about serious cinema and the subtle influences it can have on audiences.
Also, Stephen Seagal's (some would say cameo) appearance as Lt. Col. Travis Austin shows what impact a serious actor, unselfish in his craft, can have on a project by leaving it early.
"There is a branch of right-wing movie criticism that consists of complaints that the cinema needs more clear-cut heroes, unencumbered by the ambiguities of real life."
This sounds like the kind of criticism that Ayn Rand might give. Do you mean Michael Medved? I think now has a radio show. Of all the radio shows I have ever heard on a terrestrial AM station his is, in my opinion, the most annoying. His voice is patronizing and his opinions very predictable. A very bad combination.
No, the accent may be similar but not the tone. The tone in Medved is overbearing. I would not mind having John Stossel over for bear. Medved I can only take for roughly 1/2 an hour before the next show starts.
Excellent comments about Rohmer, one of my favorites. I'm currently working my way through the Criterion collection of the Six Moral Tales. Not only do these DVD's contain the six films, but a number of Rohmer's shorter films and a fascinating interview about Pascal between two French philosophers.
With many new announcement about the wizard of oz movies in the news, you might want to consider starting to obtain Wizard of Oz books series either as collectible or investment at http://www.RareOzBooks.com.
Thanks for the heads up. I believe this is the first review I've seen of Rohmer's work, at least in awhile.
I am dying to see comments from libertarasci-figeeks on this one.
Let's place bets. If Suki gets here first it will be comparisons to Avatar. I think SugarFree will be something obscure that only Naga has read, but if Naga is first it will be Star Wars . . .
...The Libertarian Guy:borg,Old Mexican: it will be TLTR (I think he never gets laid), ...
I'm ashamed to say it, but when I had first heard the news I thought, "Another French director is gone--oh well."
But based on what you've written, I'll have to check out his work.
I had pretty much the same reaction. "Oh, French New Wave? Whatever." But the rest of the piece convinced me to add a few movies to my Netflix queue.
Interesting fun fact via Wikipedia. The director's surname Rohmer was a pseudonym based on the name ofFu Manchu writer Sax Rohmer, which was itself a nom de plume.
Sounds like enough feathers to make a war bonnet there Art.
My Night With Maud
Someone actually made a movie out of that show? Norman Lear's fan base is more broad that I could ever imagine.
I saw One, Two, Three yesterday. I hadn't seen it since I was a child. It wasn't as funny as I remembered, but it's probably doesn't pull any punches in bashing communism. Not sure how much that had to do with Billy Wilder's politics or the fact it was a big ad for Coca Cola.
I liked Rohmer's epic (I can't remember the name) about a disfunctional, borderline-anarchistic group of Americans who, with a Russian interloper, bristle at and yet adapt to their unlikely alliance with parts of the U.S. military-industrial complex in an effort to thwart a huge meteor heading to devastate Earth. Rohmer got nuanced performances out of Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler and Bruce Willis in that.
My only complaint? Not enough space insects.
I see what you did. Twisted.
It's a shame he never did anything for the SyFy network either.
I liked that one too. It had my favorite implimentation of the golf club and golf ball in cinema since Animal House.
Not enough space insects.
Space insects are tough. You have to do them just right or they are not believable.
FUCK YOU FOR MENTIONING MICHAEL BAY
Well, if you can find another cinematographer who has done more hard work exposing the inherent dangers of creating and/or utilizing mechanized, weaponized, multifunctional (read: covert) and sentient automatons for the purposes of waging clandestine war on civilian targets (e.g. Shia LaBeouf), I'd like to know about it, smart guy.
Stuart Gordon.
Robot Jox? Please. Completely different angle on the subject.
In addition to starring Gary Graham, widely regarded as the poor man's Bruce Greenwood, that movie totally pandered to the sophmoric sensibilites of the teenage movie goers straight-to-VHS renters of the time. Plus, if I remember the "plot" correctly, the robot combat was used as surrogate for warfare, not to facilitate it. And, it was a public spectacle. And, not one of Gordon's robots mutated with any plausibility into a Ford Mustang.
Next up: Directors whose films discuss in a thoughtful way the vulnerabilities of transporting a large group of convicted felons from one point of incarceration to another via cargo planes, and the dangers that practice poses to Nicolas Cage.
You two sound like two cover-band front-boys arguing over who's outfit is more flawed. Will the fistfight be broadcast?
Also, fistfight is my middle name.
Airport '77? Passenger 57? Executive Decision? Starflight: The Plane That Couldn't Land?
Okay. I can see some of us are not interested in having an earnest discussion about serious cinema and the subtle influences it can have on audiences.
Also, Stephen Seagal's (some would say cameo) appearance as Lt. Col. Travis Austin shows what impact a serious actor, unselfish in his craft, can have on a project by leaving it early.
Man, this is what I call a slow day at r?ison, talking about dead French film-makers.
juris imprudent, any ideas?
How about...is it your first instinct to yell out 'VA' after meeting a girl named 'Gina'?
"There is a branch of right-wing movie criticism that consists of complaints that the cinema needs more clear-cut heroes, unencumbered by the ambiguities of real life."
This sounds like the kind of criticism that Ayn Rand might give. Do you mean Michael Medved? I think now has a radio show. Of all the radio shows I have ever heard on a terrestrial AM station his is, in my opinion, the most annoying. His voice is patronizing and his opinions very predictable. A very bad combination.
I always think he sounds like John Stossel.
No, the accent may be similar but not the tone. The tone in Medved is overbearing. I would not mind having John Stossel over for bear. Medved I can only take for roughly 1/2 an hour before the next show starts.
"I would not mind having John Stossel over for bear." I am all for gay rights.
adagio,
You shouldn't cross threads. It could be bad.
WTH?
...and my arbiter?
I think that is from Ghost Busters. Check with someone under 40 to be sure.
No shit, she's not exactly known for her subtlety and ambiguity. Her novels don't reflect real life.
test
fail
ROFL!
Social promotion
Trolling ReCTaL
Wow, he will indeed be missed dude, seriously.
RT
http://www.total-anonymity.de.tc
Holy shite, how does a freakin' bot make more sense then chad/tony?
Excellent comments about Rohmer, one of my favorites. I'm currently working my way through the Criterion collection of the Six Moral Tales. Not only do these DVD's contain the six films, but a number of Rohmer's shorter films and a fascinating interview about Pascal between two French philosophers.
With many new announcement about the wizard of oz movies in the news, you might want to consider starting to obtain Wizard of Oz books series either as collectible or investment at http://www.RareOzBooks.com.
thanks