Autumn Tale

Masters

"Rohmer elegantly seduces us with people who have all of the alarming unpredictability of life"

Roger Ebert
  • Archive - Festival 36
  • Director: Éric Rohmer
  • France 1998
  • 111 minutes
  • French
  • Subtitles in Hebrew

Magali, 45, a wine grower in the South of France, lives alone in a stone farmhouse overlooking her small vineyard. She is resigned to her loneliness and prefers developing wine to nurturing love. It is the vendange, the skies are golden, and she does not have time for romance. Her friend Isabelle is not ready to give up and places a lonely-hearts advertisement on her behalf.

Éric  Rohmer completes his Tales of Four Seasons quartet on a hopeful note with a film about love, chance, life and coincidence that unfold in a series of delights, surprises and reversals. Magali spends much of the film on the very edge of missing out on her chance for happiness and this gives the romantic comedy a deeper charm, a special poignancy.

Restored Digital Copy

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Éric Rohmer 1920-2010

 

The Haifa Festival celebrates a centennial to the birth of Éric Rohmer and a decade to his passing with a tribute of seven of his films in restored digital copies.

Éric Rohmer was born as Jean-Marie Maurice Schérer in 1920 in Tulle. He assumed the nom de plume - inspired by Erich von Stroheim and pulp novelist Sax Rohmer - for personal reasons, his mother was led to believe that Maurice was a teacher, and she died in 1970 unaware that he did anything else. Rohmer did teach school for a short time and began his writing career in the mid-1940s (he published the 1946 novel Elisabeth under another nom de plume, Gilles Cordier).

After moving to Paris, he started to write film criticism for French periodicals and was a founding editor of La Gazette du cinéma in 1950, along with François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, and Jacques Rivette, and became editor in chief of the New Wave publication Cahiers du cinéma in 1957. That year he and Claude Chabrol authored the film study Hitchcock. In 1963 he quit Cahiers after becoming involved in a dispute.

Unlike his New Wave contemporaries, Rohmer’s debut film, The Sign of Leo (1959) failed and he would have to wait a decade for his first international and critical success, My Night at Maud.

Rohmer is renowned for the three film series he produced between 1963 and 1998. The stories in Six Moral Tales - Rohmer’s first series - were inspired by Murnau’s Sunrise (1927) and focused on “a man meeting a woman at the very moment when he is about to commit himself to someone else”. The realization that obsession can replace reality underpinned his second series, the Comedies and Proverbs sextet. And then came the quartet Tales of the Four Seasons. All three series are represented in the tribute.

“Éric Rohmer is the romantic philosopher of the French New Wave, the director whose characters make love with words as well as flesh. They are open to sudden flashes of passion, they become infatuated at first sight, but then they descend into doubt and analysis, talking intensely about what it all means” - Roger Ebert.

Éric Rohmer won numerous awards for his films, including the Golden Lion for Best Film and the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the Venice Festival, the Louis Delluc Prize, the David di Donatello Luchino Visconti Award and Academy Award nominations.


  • Director Éric Rohmer
  • Production Françoise Etchegaray
  • Script Éric Rohmer
  • Cinematography Diane Baratier
  • Editing Mary Stephen
  • Music Claude Marti, Gérard Pansanel, Pierre Peyra, Antonello Salis
  • Festivals Venice 1998 (Best Screenplay Award)
  • Actors Béatrice Romand, Marie Rivière, Alain Libolt, Didier Sandre,
  • Source Les Films du Losange, Paris