Conte d'hiver
(Eric Rohmer, 1992)
 
One of his "Tales of the Seasons," Eric Rohmer`s A Tale of Winter is nearly as wonderful as his Le beau mariage (1981), the best romantic comedy of the 1980s.  Of course, one expects in this genre a lot from Rohmer, the artist who wrote and directed Claire`s Knee (1970).  But one of A Tale of Winter`s predecessors in the seasonal cycle, A Tale of Springtime (1989), although shrewd, inclined me to think that, nearly seventy then, Rohmer had had his day.  What pleasant chastisement now; for Rohmer`s Winter is a beautiful match for Shakespeare`s own Winter`s Tale, to which it deftly refers.

The central character is Felicie (Charlotte Véry, most felicitous), who makes passionate love with Charles, a cook; a "stupid slip," though, finds her giving this terrific lover the wrong address for contacting her, and somehow, too, Charles fails to give Felicie any mail drop address for contacting him before leaving the country.  Five years later, Felicie is raising their daughter, Elise, and holding onto her one photograph of him and her memory of him.  Meanwhile, she has two lovers: Loic, a cozy librarian, and Maxence, a "man`s man."  Felicie works as a beautician for Maxence, who is a hairdresser.  All the while, Charles remains the high standard against which she measures both Loic and Maxence and her love for them.  Why two men?  By not choosing one of them over the other Felicie is thus able to preserve for the absent Charles a position in her life of romantic preeminence.

But now Felicie must choose.  Maxence has decided to leave Paris for Nevers.  Shall she accompany him or stay in Paris with Loic?  Leaving Loic behind, she goes with Maxence.  This choice of hers, however, will not hold.  After experiencing a "lucid" moment in a church, Felicie returns to Paris.  She even takes up again with Loic—though more in friendship than in passion.  One night the two attend a performance of The Winter`s Tale, from which (wrongly!) Felicie concludes that Hermione is brought back to life by faith.  This in turn leads her to anticipate Charles`s miraculous reappearance.  Then one day, sitting opposite her and Elise on a bus . . .

Engaging the dilemma of romantic choice, Rohmer shows how we sometimes pseudopsychologically justify choices we in fact are most reluctant to make and feel unsure about.  For instance, Felicie tells Loic that she is going with Maxence to Nevers because she is less likely there than in Paris to chance across Charles.  This makes sense; but the explanation doesn`t fit Felicie`s true feelings.  A kind person, Felicie surely is trying to reject Loic in the gentlest way possible.  But she is doing something else besides.  By her tortuous rationale Felicie is also trying to convince herself that her choice—Maxence over Loic—is the correct one.  Indeed, Rohmer punctures with sly, breathless irony the very notion that Felicie`s move will help remove whatever impediment Charles poses to her giving up the ghost of her one perfect sexual encounter.  Rohmer`s is a brush of wit that those familiar with French cinema must savor.  For it is to Nevers that Felicie is moving: in film, a town synonymous with abiding memory of lost love--a symbolical inheritance from Alain Resnais`s Hiroshima, mon amour (1959).   Rohmer`s point here, surely, is that, whether Felicie actually runs into him, her memory of Charles will continue to haunt her.

Coupled with its rationalization, Felicie`s choice of Maxence over Loic contains and thus discloses her very uncertainty over it.  Felicie doesn`t even precisely "own" the choice; for her decision to accompany Maxence is in fact forced by his decision to leave Paris.  (Indeed, Maxence`s decision is partly motivated by his desire to force this decision of hers.)   And this remove from responsibility for her own choice enables Felicie to pass on to him some of her responsibility for her making this choice—a helpful outcome only because she wasn`t sure of her decision in the first place.  Nor is this the only "out" Felicie allows herself; for she can withdraw her decision at any time—which in fact is what she does when she leaves Maxence and returns to Paris.

Nor is this the first time she has "arranged" things, unconsciously, to provide herself with such an "out."  Felicie`s "slip" of giving Charles a wrong address is also an unconscious way of giving herself a door out of a relationship in order to keep from becoming bound to an uncertain choice or decision of hers.  It is, therefore, the first in a series of romantic dodges, self-deceptions and equivocations.

Nor is Felicie the only character so rattled by responsibility in romance.  What about Loic and Maxence?  Are they really as sure as they seem of their 
choice of Felicie?  By implying the contrary Rohmer perfectly captures the essence of romantic anxiety here as well; for each of these honorable, honest men tries (as is our human wont) to insist into existence the great relationship with Felicie that neither has but both desire.  They also work hard at convincing themselves they have made the right choice.

We all know about the one that slipped away.  Charles`s convenient absence doubtless facilitates Felicie`s paramount commitment to him.  In other words, her one (now) absolutely certain choice benefits from her not actually having had to deal with the man!  But Rohmer (bless him) does let us know, even though she herself may not quite know, just why Felicie so persistently prefers Charles to the two men at her fingertips.  It is the great sex they had—a point Rohmer underscores by dramatic selection; although it is plain that Loic and Maxence are her lovers, the film shows Felicie making love only with Charles.  This "hiding" of her sex with the others also becomes a means by which Rohmer suggests one of his film`s principal themes.  Rohmer`s dialogues in Winter sparkle with self-analysis and references to Plato and Pascal.  (Who else but Rohmer gives us such talk in films?)  While surely expressing the French love of ideas (not to mention the sheer verbal generosity of the French), all their intellectual conversation allows these characters to sidestep and hide from themselves their sexual motives.  And this theme nicely returns the film to its other major theme; for isn`t the concealment of sexual priorities—from oneself; from others—an important factor in human uncertainty in matters of the heart such as commitment?

What a delightfully complex view of human nature Rohmer gives us here—one which holds up a mirror to our most sheltered and vulnerable feelings, our motives, our sheltering rationalizations.  With the help of his color cinematographer, Maurice Giraud, Rohmer has given the film a somber, wintry look that deepens the humor to the bone while also evoking the tentativeness, the uncertainties, of his appealing characters as they half-hide from themselves and one another in subtly underlit surroundings.  What a collaboration between artist and audience this becomes.  We must search out what Rohmer has made plain to see.

Like Shakespeare, Rohmer finds sexual love a grand—a necessary—subject.    And, like Le beau mariage, his Tale of Winter is a blissful descent into its ambiguous depths. 

Dennis Grunes

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