2/10
Totally one dimensional
24 May 2021
I do not hide the fact that I love Eric Rohmer's films but not all. Arielle Dombasle, Pascal Greggory and Fabrice Luchini try to give it life, but the documentary/fiction direction turns them into one dimensional puppets, and despite the endless discussions about the Right, the Left and the Greens in French politics (interesting in itself) swamps any character development. I realised I was watching a poor film with an early scene in the film where Dombasle gets excited by sheep, cows and flowers and she appears as a sort of Marie Antoinette figure longing for her beloved Paris and claiming that it is her ' circle ' there that counts. She plays this ludicrous scene with Pascal Greggory as her lover and also Mayor of the rural village with a grand Manor in the background. I felt so cross about this that I wanted to grind her (fictional) face in the deprived suburbs of her beloved Paris. I kind of switched off and wondered why this film had played in a Paris cinema for one whole year. For me the essential Rohmer is in his observation of changing moods, and psychological perceptions in his three series. ' Moral Tales ', ' Comedies and Proverbs ' and the flawed but still good ' Tales of Four Seasons,' but outside this body of work his films are often very dull indeed. I give it a 2 for his endlessly interesting camera movements and even in this disaster he is clearly a great, great director.
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