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Triple agent

France, Italy, Spain, Greece, Russia

2004

115 Min
Color
1.66:1
French, Russian, German, Greek
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Éric Rohmer

PROD Françoise Etchegaray, Philippe Liégeois, Jean-Michel Rey

SCR Éric Rohmer

DP Diane Baratier

CAST Katerina Didaskalou, Serge Renko, Cyrielle Clair, Grigori Manukov, Dimitri Rafalsky, Nathalia Krougly, Amanda Langlet, Jeanne Rambur, Emmanuel Salinger, Vitalyi Cheremet

ED Mary Stephen

PROD DES Antoine Fontaine

SOUND Pascal Ribier

Berlinale (Competition), London, New York, San Francisco, BAFICI (Panorama)

Synopsis

France, 1936-37. The Popular Front wins elections, the Spanish Civil War begins, and Hitler and Stalin are manipulating and spying. The brilliant exile, Fiodor Voronin, a general at 20, is the deputy at the White Russian Military Union, probably slated to replace the aging Général Dobrinsky soon. Fiodor’s Greek wife, Arsinoé, paints and stays away from politics, befriending Communist neighbors. Her health declines; the attentive Fiodor arranges care and, against the backdrop of Stalin’s Great Purge, considers his options. He plays a chess game in which love of country, love of Arsinoé, ideology, petty jealousies, and the machinations of power roil in matters of life and death. —IMDb

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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Jerry Johnson

4Mar10

There's something incredibly poignant about the fact that Rohmer was the only Nouvelle Vague director to experience WW2 as an adult and yet he waited until age 85 to directly address it in a film. It deals with his familiar intimate themes, but against the backdrop of the greatest historical stage of them all. The film is surprisingly tragic and infused with an unexpected sense of mourning and loss.

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W184

The Mask and the Role of God

By Luc Moullet on January 3, 2012

A previously unpublished article by French New Wave critic and filmmaker Luc Moullet on the cinema of Eric Rohmer.

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By Sudarsh​an R. on September 5, 2009

This is a really powerful work of cinema from Rohmer. It’s a searing and provocative examination of history in the manner of L’Anglaise et le Duc and how the politics affect and impact the family…  read review

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