Rohmer's exit

Tribute Eric Rohmer found comedy, tragedy, farce, suspense, drama in the etiquette and poses of daily life

January 17, 2010 08:15 pm | Updated 08:19 pm IST

An undated picture released by Les Films du Losange production on January 12, 2009 shows French film director Eric Rohmer directing during the shooting of his film "Conte d'ete". Rohmer died on January 11, 2010 at the age of 89.  Photo: AFP, LES FILMS DU LOSANGE

An undated picture released by Les Films du Losange production on January 12, 2009 shows French film director Eric Rohmer directing during the shooting of his film "Conte d'ete". Rohmer died on January 11, 2010 at the age of 89. Photo: AFP, LES FILMS DU LOSANGE

Eric Rohmer, French film critic, novelist and film director, passed away on January 12, 2010 at the age of 89. As it often happens with individuals who are detached in presence and self-effacing in greatness, he was taken for granted. Now, the loss has suddenly put an unprecedented singular focus on the man's life. Once again Rohmer's typical, charming elusiveness that lit his works now also seem to light his life. The more you got closer to the individual, the more he obfuscated into light.

Altering cinema forever

Eric Rohmer was a painted horizon against which great moments have been played out by eminent players standing forth and delivering their lines. As a film critic, he was instrumental in appraising and canonizing the films of Hitchcock and Hawks, which were then neglected by contemporary critics as populist cogs in the Hollywood assembly line. As the editor of the magazine “Cahiers Du Cinema” during its most legendary phase, he gave a platform for, and calmly stood behind the caustic and iconoclastic ideas of the young Truffauts, Godards, Chabrols and Vardas. He honed them so that they became legends in their own right. And ideas about cinema were altered forever. After all, where would Arnold Schwarzenegger be without the jump-cut?

But who was Eric Rohmer?

He was born Maurice Henri Joseph Schérer. His first writings were published under the nom-de-plume ‘Gilbert Cordier'. ‘Eric' he borrowed from the great German film-maker Erich von Stroheim and ‘Rohmer' he added from Sax Rohmer, creator of the Fu Manchu stories. There are more than 10 versions of his childhood and growing-up to choose from. Even on the eve of his death, the names and faces of his wife and children remained anonymous.

Rohmer, barring a few exceptions where he immersed in period and fantasy, stuck to chronicling droll middle-class people leading droll middle-class lives. They were witty exercises in rhythms of the everyday - conversations, picnics, dinners, rendezvous, dates and walking the streets, both alone and together.

His critics complain of the films being too talky and minimal or as Gene Hackman snaps in Arthur Penn's “Night Moves”, “…like watching paint dry”.

For Rohmer the deceptions, etiquettes and poses of daily life were manufactured enough and our encounters and interactions suspicious enough to strike comedy, tragedy, farce, suspense, drama, twists and revelations and sometimes all together in unforgettable fatal instants. For instance, how a middle-aged man feels in “Claire's Knee” or at that point when the sunlight breaks over the beach in “The Green Ray”.

At his prickliest and rawest, he may seem detached even cruel - but the complexity and tenderness with which he films his characters and circumstances is all too familiar and human.

After all, even legends have to die. Like he once admitted: all his tragedies were in fact, comedies.

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