Ah, color, lovely color! Yes, even though 1967's The Collector is Tale #4, it was made third, meaning Eric Rohmer went from early black and white, to color, then back to black and white: one more small reason viewing these films in the intended order rather than release order feels right. Anyway, color is especially appropriate for this tale about the power of external beauty. Lazing around on an old chateau by the beach, two chauvinist cads (one in particular) wind up throwing themselves on the rocky shores of a young woman named , with a reputation for being a temptress. The humor is up in this one, and you'll learn a lot about the philosophy of dandyism. Probably more than you're ready for. But it's worth it; this movie is so fun.
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2006 Criterion DVD top; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
And again, while both discs have the original French mono with optional English subtitles, the blu-ray bumps it up to an uncompressed LPCM track.
Also again, we're saving all the short films in these sets 'till the end, but there are a couple of Collector-specific extras on hand, in both the DVD and BD boxed sets. Well, primarily one, a vintage television interview with Rohmer that runs almost an hour (presumably it originally filled the entire hour slot with commercials). Anyway, it's great and very direct, revealing a lot of his history and thinking behind the film. There's also the original theatrical trailer.
Finally (because, again, Moral Tale #6, Love In the Afternoon, has already been covered here), we arrive at Claire's Knee from 1970. The beautiful lakeside property in this film makes The Collector's chateau look like a dump. Unfortunately, we've hit the cosmically ordained "creepy middle-aged guy leches over teenage girls" story in our saga, but Rohmer handles it as elegantly as anybody could, and it's far more self aware than most modern attempts. This isn't a Woody Allen-style romanticization of line-crossing May/ December relationships - though it may come off that way at first - but a sincere and critical exploration of that more unfortunate aspect of human nature. But admittedly, it comes off more skeevy now than it did in its day.
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2006 Criterion DVD top; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
As always, both discs provide the original French mono with optional English subtitles, but the blu-ray kicks it up to LPCM.
For extras, we get the theatrical trailer again. And as with My Night At Maud's, we get another vintage television clip. This time it's nine minutes with stars Beatrice Romand (who's gone on to appear in at least five other Rohmer films), Jean-Claude Brialy and Lawrence de Monaghan. We're told Rohmer doesn't appear because he refuses to be filmed as he is "quite unsociable." It's rather superficial and chatty, with the actors basically just pressed to give their impressions of Rohmer as a person. Also, the picture quality's pretty rough. But it's a rare bit of video, so it's nice to have it preserved here.
And so now it's finally time for those shorts, which I guess we shall tackle chronologically. And I'll just take this moment to remind you the 1958 short Veronique and her Dunce, which is in both Criterion boxes (indeed, all the shorts and extras are the same across the 2006 and 2020 sets) has already been covered here. We'll start with Charlotte and Her Steak, a brief 1951 clip starring Jean Luc Goddard as a young man who tries to make one woman jealous by visiting the titular Charlotte, who does indeed cook and eat a steak. It plays like a brief chapter in a story otherwise left untold - in an opening screed, they call it a sketch - but it's a well written scene for what it is.
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2006 AE DVD top; 2006 Criterion DVD mid; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
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2006 AE DVD top; 2006 Criterion DVD mid; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
Now, these next three shorts aren't in the Artificial Eye set, only the Criterion(s).
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2006 Criterion DVD top; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
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2006 Criterion DVD top; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
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2006 Criterion DVD top; 2020 Criterion BD bottom. |
But wait, we have one more short film - this one's only in the Early Rohmer set, and not the Six Moral Tales boxes. It's an hour+ 1968 TV documentary called The Lumiere Brothers, about the early cinematic pioneers. It's basically two sit-down interviews with fellow filmmakers Jean Renoir and Henri Langlois with some clips inserted. It's a bit dry, mostly just static shots of these guys in their chairs talking towards the cameras, but a rare and knowledgeable discussion by and about some important film masters. It's framed at 1.31:1, and the film has some flecks, but looks pretty good overall. The audio is mono in Dolby Digital 2.0 with removable subtitles.
Eric Rohmer: The Early Works just has the two DVDs in a clear amary case. But the Criterion boxes are packed. The discs are housed a fold-out digi-pack that's housed in a slipbox. Also inside is a 64-page booklet with a series of essays and a vintage Rohmer interview. And more impressively, a 262-page collection of all of Rohmer's original Six Moral Tales stories. Criterion's BD box is easily the way to go for all six films and the accompanying shorts. But Sign Of the Lion is only available on DVD as part of the massive French Potemkine set (briefly discussed here), so many of us Rohmer fans are still holding onto the AE DVDs, too.