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Changing Landscape

L'ère industrielle: Métamorphoses du paysage

France

1964

23 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
French
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Éric Rohmer

PROD Pierre Gavarry, Maurice Scherer

DP Pierre Lhomme

CAST Antoine Vitez

ED Christine du Breuil

MUSIC Betty Willemetz

Synopsis

One of Rohmer’s most obscure works a black-and-white short film, “Changing Landscapes” (“Metamorphoses du paysage”), made for TV in 1964. It appears to be part of a series with the overall title Vers l’unité du monde: L’ère industrielle. It’s a series of shots of the countryside and its transformation into an urban landscape, with a voiceover (in French, subtitled into English). The end credits call it “Une émission de Maurice Schérer” (i.e. Rohmer, using a variation of his real name). The cinematography is credited to Pierre Lhomme, a DP of some distinction but one who never worked on any of Rohmer’s features. “Changing Landscapes” is full-frame, running 22:20. It’s in remarkably good condition, with only a few scratches here and there. This tele-essay will no doubt be much too dry for a general audience, but Rohmer fans and completists will be glad to have it. —DVDTimes

Director

Original

Éric Rohmer

The most subtle and traditional of the many luminaries launched to prominence as a member of the French New Wave, Eric Rohmer is also among the movement’s most consistent and enduring talents. Basing his work upon antecedents in literature as much as those in the cinema, Rohmer made his name crafting talky, feather-light romantic comedies and chamber dramas distinguished by economical camerawork, a warmly ironic tone, an affection for youth, and a fascination with place and time. His intensely personal private life — according to legend, not even his own mother knew he was an internationally acclaimed, albeit pseudonymously named, filmmaker — has stood in direct contrast to the emotional openness of his movies, which, in intimate and illuminating detail, explore the limitless entanglements, disappointments, and possibilities facing contemporary relationships.
Born Jean-Marie Maurice Scherer on December 1, 1920, in Nancy, France, Rohmer later relocated to Paris, where he worked variously… read more

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Picture of Joe Bender

Joe Bender

5Aug11

This is a fascinating film - a Bachelard-like meditation on the beauties of the Paris suburbs, transformed by a century and a half of heavy industry. It's particularly interesting as a film about the Paris suburbs that attacks both the endemic association between the bad and the ugly and the distinction between natural and human landscapes. For a great companion piece look at Bruisseau's (fiction) _La Ville bidon_.

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