Whereas some of his peers
in the French New Wave were provocateurs who blended experimental techniques
with radical politics (here’s looking at you, Monsieur Godard), Eric Rohmer
took a different path. Crafting cerebral character studies bereft of cinematic
fireworks, Rohmer was something of an essayist for the big screen, using
copious amounts of dialogue and/or voiceover to explore the foibles of
humankind. Throughout his career, Rohmer made groups of films that he linked
with series titles, and the first such group was called Six Moral Tales. Commencing with a short film titled The Bakery Girl of Monceau (1963), Six Moral Tales concluded with Rohmer’s
first two features of the ’70s, Claire’s
Knew and Chloe in the Afternoon. (The
latter picture is sometimes titled Love
in the Afternoon.) Both movies investigate questions of love and sexuality
through the prism of men tempted by inappropriate women.
In Claire’s Knee, the better of the two
pictures, a wealthy diplomat named Jerome (Jean-Claude Brialy) encounters a
long-lost female friend named Aurora (Aurora Cornu) during a vacation in
picturesque Lake Annecy. Although Jerome has a girlfriend, Aurora persuades
Jerome to help with an experiment that she hopes will stimulate ideas for the
novel she’s trying to write. Aurora asks Jerome to flirt with Laura (Béatrice
Romand), the teenaged daughter of a mutual friend, in order to see whether
Laura takes the bait. Jerome, who is accustomed to doing well with women,
agrees partially because the experiment sounds intellectually stimulating and
partially because the idea of a tryst with an attractive young woman is
tantalizing. Yet plans go awry once Laura’s cousin Claire (Laurence de Monaghan)
arrives in Lake Annecy. Unlike the dark and quirky Laura, Claire is a gleaming
blonde, so Jerome becomes obsessed with Claire.
More specifically, as the title
suggests, Jerome’s preoccupation fixates on Claire’s knee because Jerome sees
Claire’s unworthy boyfriend touching her knee while giving her a line about how
he’ll always be true. In Jerome’s addled mind, Claire’s knee is the way to her
heart. Claire’s Knee tells an oddly
compelling story that’s filled with unsettling sexual implications, even though
the tone of the piece is clinical. Paralleling Aurora’s endeavor, the whole
film feels like an experiment testing what happens when the heart and the mind
interact. (As Aurora says, “Everyone wears blindfolds or at least
blinders—writing forces me to keep my eyes open.”) The women in Jerome’s life
display various fascinating colors, from Aurora’s playful detachment to
Claire’s youthful arrogance to Laura’s sexy insouciance. In the middle of all
this female energy is Jerome, whom Rohmer uses to represent a prevalent sort of
testosterone-driven entitlement. “When something pleases me, I do it for
pleasure,” Jerome says. “Why tie myself down with one woman when others
interest me?”
Detractors of Rohmer’s restrained style could easily complain
about the static visuals and the absence of a major climax, but Claire’s Knee adroitly captures the
ephemeral feelings that people experience while moving through the intricate
dance of attraction, achieving intimacy at one moment and lapsing into distance
the next. Subtle profundities abound, and Rohmer’s filmmaking is as elegant in
its simplicity as the acting of the expert cast is incisive.
The follow-up
movie, Chloe in the Afternoon, tries
to do more than its predecessor but ends up accomplishing less. The picture
concerns a lawyer named Frédéric (Bernard Vaerley), who is married to beautiful
teacher Hélène (Françoise Verley) but still has a wandering eye. During the
first part of the film, Frédéric explains his shapeless ennui in voiceover: “The
prospect of quiet happiness stretching indefinitely before me depresses me.” Put more bluntly, Frédéric is bored by marriage and preoccupied with the
notion of fresh romantic conquests. Accordingly, he experiences a long fantasy
sequence during which he wears an amulet that robs beautiful women of free
will, giving him endless access to new sex partners. (Many of the actresses
from Claire’s Knee cameo in this
sequence.) Once the story proper gets underway, around 25 minutes into Chloe in the Afternoon, Frédéric
receives a visit from an old flame, Chloé (played by one-named Gallic starlet
Zouzou). In modern vernacular, she’s a hot mess, having spent years bouncing
from job to job and from lover to lover without setting down roots. Frédéric
helps Chloé get back on her feet, and the two steadily advance toward a
tryst—even as Frédéric wrestles with the potential repercussions of
transforming his erotic dreams into reality.
The beauty of Claire’s Knee is that it’s about, at least in part, a man realizing
that his sense of sexual omnipotence is an illusion. The story is palatable
because it humanizes a would-be Casanova. By comparison, Chloe in the Afternoon seems pedestrian and, within the chaste
parameters of Rohmer’s style, déclassé. Beneath the surface of articulate
dialogue and meticulous dramaturgy, it’s a trite tale about a wannabe philanderer
who toys with the emotions of a vulnerable woman. After all, is Frédéric’s
lament that “I take Hélène too seriously to be serious with her” anything but a
trussed-up version of the old saw, “She doesn’t understand me”? Chloe in the Afternoon is a serious and worthwhile rumination on
matters of the heart, but it’s not as novel or provocative as Claire’s Knee.
Claire’s Knee: GROOVY
Chloe in the Afternoon: GROOVY
Just watched both of these and agree that CK is the best of the two (unlike David Thomson, who feels the opposite way, apparently)
ReplyDeleteBut, wow, I guess I just have to say it : Seemed kinda like a "KneeToo" moment to me, haw haw!!
I mean, once he gets going, the dude really goes to town on that knee!