Осенняя сказка 1998 conte d automne

10 stars

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7 stars

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5 stars

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1 star

Осенняя сказка

Рейтинг
7.4
7.4
7.4
Название
Conte d’automne
Год
1998
Жанры

драма,

комедия,

мелодрама

Страна

Франция

Режиссёр

Эрик Ромер
Сценарий
Актёры

Мари Ривьер,


Беатрис Роман,


Ален Либоль,


Дидье Сандр,


Алексия Порталь,


Стефани Дармон,


Аурелия Алькаис,


Маттьё Даветт,


Ив Алькаис
Время

1 час 52 минуты

Премьера
7 сентября 1998 в мире
DVD
20 сентября 2006

Магали сорок пять лет, по профессии она винодел, а по семейному положению вдова. После того, как взрослые дети покинули родной дом, ей немного одиноко, и ее лучшая подруга, Изабель, решает подыскать для нее нового мужа. В тайне от Магали Изабель размещает в местной газете объявление и находит приятную кандидатуру по имени Жеральд.

В то же самое время Розин (девушка сына Магали) вознамерилась познакомить потенциальную свекровь со своим бывшим учителем философии (и заодно экс-любовником) Этьеном. В итоге получается так, что на свадьбе дочери Изабель ни о чем не подозревающая Магали знакомится сразу с обоими мужчинами…

Autumn Tale
Autumn Tale FilmPoster.jpeg

Theatrical release poster

French Conte d’automne
Directed by Éric Rohmer
Written by Éric Rohmer
Produced by Françoise Etchegaray
Starring
  • Béatrice Romand
  • Marie Rivière
  • Didier Sandre
  • Alain Libolt
  • Alexia Portal
  • Stéphane Darmon
  • Aurélia Alcaïs
Cinematography Diane Baratier
Edited by Mary Stephen

Production
companies

  • Les films du losange
  • La Sept Cinéma
  • Rhône-Alpes Cinéma
Distributed by Les films du losange

Release dates

  • 7 September 1998 (Venice)
  • 23 September 1998 (France)

Running time

112 minutes
Country France
Language French
Budget $2.8 million
Box office $2.2 million[1]

Autumn Tale (French: Conte d’automne) is a 1998 French romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Éric Rohmer, starring Béatrice Romand, Marie Rivière, Didier Sandre, Alain Libolt, Alexia Portal, Stéphane Darmon and Aurélia Alcaïs. It is the fourth and final instalment in Rohmer’s Tales of the Four Seasons series, which also includes A Tale of Springtime (1990), A Tale of Winter (1992) and A Summer’s Tale (1996).

Plot[edit]

Winemaker and widow, Magali (Béatrice Romand) is 40 years old and absorbs herself in her vineyards to distract. Her good friends Rosine (Alexia Portal) and Isabelle (Marie Rivière), individually concoct plans to get her dating again, but using their own social abilities to lure the men into their plans. Isabelle finds an appropriate middle-aged man named Gerald (a widower himself) on a dating service and makes first contact. Magali refuses to use personal ads to meet men, and her work has prevented her from having any personal life, so Isabelle has to continuously go out on dates with Gerald to warm him up.

Rosine uses her youth and sexuality as a lure with her older university professor, Etienne, who is hoping to have a relationship with the younger student. As both couples’ relationships advance, both women reveal that the plan all along was to have them date Magali-presenting a picture of her. Both men are taken aback at the deception, but find themselves curious enough to meet her.

Both independent plans come to their conclusion at the wedding of Isabelle’s daughter, when Rosine’s professor shows more interest in another youthful woman from the school. Magali meets Gerald at the wine table and they instantly create a bond discussing their Northern African experiences and lives in the winery business. Milling around the wedding, Gerald runs into Isabelle and they move to a quieter location to discuss how the first meeting unfolded. When Isabelle hugs Gerald, Magali opens the door on the couple by accident and sees the embrace. Despondent, Magali reverts into her anti-social behavior, disappointed that her friend is having an affair with a man she was connecting with.

Magali wants to leave the wedding, but her son takes the car, so she is dependent on getting a ride home. Isabelle and Gerald, not knowing that Magali had seen them hugging, offer a ride to her. On the ride home, Magali gets into an argument with the confused Gerald, who is forced to drop her off at a remote train station near Orange.

After waiting for hours, Magali gives up on the train and takes a taxi back to the wedding-hoping her son has returned the car.

Gerald also has returned to the wedding, which is near ending, to complain and tell Isabelle about the incident with Magali.

As the two converge on Isabelle, the plot is revealed and Isabelle says that the presumption of the affair with Gerald was impossible as she loves her husband. Magali and Gerald begin to laugh and decide to make another try, without all the confusing deception, at her Fall harvest party later in the month.

Cast[edit]

  • Béatrice Romand as Magali
  • Marie Rivière as Isabelle
  • Didier Sandre as Étienne
  • Alain Libolt [fr] as Gérald
  • Alexia Portal as Rosine
  • Stéphane Darmon as Léo
  • Aurélia Alcaïs as Émilia

Themes[edit]

Autumn is traditionally the time to harvest wine grapes as the cooling begins. The grapes are mature and have the correct balance of sugar for fermentation. Thematically also representative of advancing age, where middle-aged adults are approaching the second half of their lives with a balance of romanticism, pragmatism and ambition. Rohmer uses Rosine’s ambitious and naïve assumptions and compares it to the older Isabelle’s practicality and softer approach to find the right person for Magali.

Reception[edit]

Sight & Sound called it a «beautiful, witty and serene film» which «never falls into the talking-heads trap. Encounters in cars, cafés, gardens and restaurants are visually dramatised, allowing the characters’ philosophies (the action of the film, as it were) to be expressed dynamically. And this literary emphasis on language, something of a cliché with Rohmer, and the simplicity of the mise en scène rest on tight plotting in the tradition of Rohmer’s master, Hitchcock.»[2]

Stephen Holden, in excerpts re-published after the film’s New York City opening but originally written after the film’s appearance as part of the 1998 New York Film Festival, called the film «as sublimely warming an experience as the autumn sun that shines benevolently on the vineyard owned by the film’s central character, Magali (Beatrice Romand)»; although the film has its «labored moments» and «except for a twist here and there, you know where the story is going to go», the film nevertheless «evokes such a sensuous atmosphere — bird song, wind and light and shadow that delineate the season and time of day with an astonishing precision — that you are all but transported into Magali’s fields, where this year’s grapes promise to yield an especially fine vintage.»[3]

The Boston Review said «The Autumn Tale… outshines its [Tales of Four Seasons] predecessors….Throughout this film one senses that both the characters and the audience are in the hands of a great psychologist–if one knew more about the Rhône Valley, its old towns and its new factories, one would appreciate even more how Rohmer’s women are suited to their local social reality, which is filmed as carefully as they are.»[4]

Roger Ebert gave the film four stars out of four, saying «Even though I enjoy Hollywood romantic comedies like Notting Hill, it’s like they wear galoshes compared to the sly wit of a movie like Autumn Tale. They stomp squishy-footed through their clockwork plots, while Rohmer elegantly seduces us with people who have all of the alarming unpredictability of life.»[5]

Awards[edit]

The film won the Golden Osella («Best Screenplay») at the 55th Venice International Film Festival. It was selected as the 1999 Best Foreign Language Film by the National Society of Film Critics.

DVD release[edit]

In the United Kingdom, a region 2 DVD was released by Artificial Eye, with English subtitles and an interview with the writer/director.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ «Conte d’automne (Autumn Love) (1998) — JPBox-Office».
  2. ^ «An Autumn Tale». Sight & Sound. British Film Institute. April 1999. Archived from the original on 2008-10-16. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  3. ^ Stephen Holden (July 9, 1999). «Mellow and Full of Charm Under the Autumn Sun». The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  4. ^ Alan A. Stone (Summer 1999). «Eric Rohmer’s Canvas». Boston Review. Archived from the original on 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  5. ^ Roger Ebert (August 20, 1999). «Autumn Tale». Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  6. ^ «An Autumn Tale». Artificial Eye. Archived from the original on 26 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-01-17.

External links[edit]

  • Autumn Tale at IMDb
  • Autumn Tale at AllMovie
  • Autumn Tale at Box Office Mojo
  • Autumn Tale at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata
  • Autumn Tale at Rotten Tomatoes
Autumn Tale
Autumn Tale FilmPoster.jpeg

Theatrical release poster

French Conte d’automne
Directed by Éric Rohmer
Written by Éric Rohmer
Produced by Françoise Etchegaray
Starring
  • Béatrice Romand
  • Marie Rivière
  • Didier Sandre
  • Alain Libolt
  • Alexia Portal
  • Stéphane Darmon
  • Aurélia Alcaïs
Cinematography Diane Baratier
Edited by Mary Stephen

Production
companies

  • Les films du losange
  • La Sept Cinéma
  • Rhône-Alpes Cinéma
Distributed by Les films du losange

Release dates

  • 7 September 1998 (Venice)
  • 23 September 1998 (France)

Running time

112 minutes
Country France
Language French
Budget $2.8 million
Box office $2.2 million[1]

Autumn Tale (French: Conte d’automne) is a 1998 French romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Éric Rohmer, starring Béatrice Romand, Marie Rivière, Didier Sandre, Alain Libolt, Alexia Portal, Stéphane Darmon and Aurélia Alcaïs. It is the fourth and final instalment in Rohmer’s Tales of the Four Seasons series, which also includes A Tale of Springtime (1990), A Tale of Winter (1992) and A Summer’s Tale (1996).

Plot[edit]

Winemaker and widow, Magali (Béatrice Romand) is 40 years old and absorbs herself in her vineyards to distract. Her good friends Rosine (Alexia Portal) and Isabelle (Marie Rivière), individually concoct plans to get her dating again, but using their own social abilities to lure the men into their plans. Isabelle finds an appropriate middle-aged man named Gerald (a widower himself) on a dating service and makes first contact. Magali refuses to use personal ads to meet men, and her work has prevented her from having any personal life, so Isabelle has to continuously go out on dates with Gerald to warm him up.

Rosine uses her youth and sexuality as a lure with her older university professor, Etienne, who is hoping to have a relationship with the younger student. As both couples’ relationships advance, both women reveal that the plan all along was to have them date Magali-presenting a picture of her. Both men are taken aback at the deception, but find themselves curious enough to meet her.

Both independent plans come to their conclusion at the wedding of Isabelle’s daughter, when Rosine’s professor shows more interest in another youthful woman from the school. Magali meets Gerald at the wine table and they instantly create a bond discussing their Northern African experiences and lives in the winery business. Milling around the wedding, Gerald runs into Isabelle and they move to a quieter location to discuss how the first meeting unfolded. When Isabelle hugs Gerald, Magali opens the door on the couple by accident and sees the embrace. Despondent, Magali reverts into her anti-social behavior, disappointed that her friend is having an affair with a man she was connecting with.

Magali wants to leave the wedding, but her son takes the car, so she is dependent on getting a ride home. Isabelle and Gerald, not knowing that Magali had seen them hugging, offer a ride to her. On the ride home, Magali gets into an argument with the confused Gerald, who is forced to drop her off at a remote train station near Orange.

After waiting for hours, Magali gives up on the train and takes a taxi back to the wedding-hoping her son has returned the car.

Gerald also has returned to the wedding, which is near ending, to complain and tell Isabelle about the incident with Magali.

As the two converge on Isabelle, the plot is revealed and Isabelle says that the presumption of the affair with Gerald was impossible as she loves her husband. Magali and Gerald begin to laugh and decide to make another try, without all the confusing deception, at her Fall harvest party later in the month.

Cast[edit]

  • Béatrice Romand as Magali
  • Marie Rivière as Isabelle
  • Didier Sandre as Étienne
  • Alain Libolt [fr] as Gérald
  • Alexia Portal as Rosine
  • Stéphane Darmon as Léo
  • Aurélia Alcaïs as Émilia

Themes[edit]

Autumn is traditionally the time to harvest wine grapes as the cooling begins. The grapes are mature and have the correct balance of sugar for fermentation. Thematically also representative of advancing age, where middle-aged adults are approaching the second half of their lives with a balance of romanticism, pragmatism and ambition. Rohmer uses Rosine’s ambitious and naïve assumptions and compares it to the older Isabelle’s practicality and softer approach to find the right person for Magali.

Reception[edit]

Sight & Sound called it a «beautiful, witty and serene film» which «never falls into the talking-heads trap. Encounters in cars, cafés, gardens and restaurants are visually dramatised, allowing the characters’ philosophies (the action of the film, as it were) to be expressed dynamically. And this literary emphasis on language, something of a cliché with Rohmer, and the simplicity of the mise en scène rest on tight plotting in the tradition of Rohmer’s master, Hitchcock.»[2]

Stephen Holden, in excerpts re-published after the film’s New York City opening but originally written after the film’s appearance as part of the 1998 New York Film Festival, called the film «as sublimely warming an experience as the autumn sun that shines benevolently on the vineyard owned by the film’s central character, Magali (Beatrice Romand)»; although the film has its «labored moments» and «except for a twist here and there, you know where the story is going to go», the film nevertheless «evokes such a sensuous atmosphere — bird song, wind and light and shadow that delineate the season and time of day with an astonishing precision — that you are all but transported into Magali’s fields, where this year’s grapes promise to yield an especially fine vintage.»[3]

The Boston Review said «The Autumn Tale… outshines its [Tales of Four Seasons] predecessors….Throughout this film one senses that both the characters and the audience are in the hands of a great psychologist–if one knew more about the Rhône Valley, its old towns and its new factories, one would appreciate even more how Rohmer’s women are suited to their local social reality, which is filmed as carefully as they are.»[4]

Roger Ebert gave the film four stars out of four, saying «Even though I enjoy Hollywood romantic comedies like Notting Hill, it’s like they wear galoshes compared to the sly wit of a movie like Autumn Tale. They stomp squishy-footed through their clockwork plots, while Rohmer elegantly seduces us with people who have all of the alarming unpredictability of life.»[5]

Awards[edit]

The film won the Golden Osella («Best Screenplay») at the 55th Venice International Film Festival. It was selected as the 1999 Best Foreign Language Film by the National Society of Film Critics.

DVD release[edit]

In the United Kingdom, a region 2 DVD was released by Artificial Eye, with English subtitles and an interview with the writer/director.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ «Conte d’automne (Autumn Love) (1998) — JPBox-Office».
  2. ^ «An Autumn Tale». Sight & Sound. British Film Institute. April 1999. Archived from the original on 2008-10-16. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  3. ^ Stephen Holden (July 9, 1999). «Mellow and Full of Charm Under the Autumn Sun». The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  4. ^ Alan A. Stone (Summer 1999). «Eric Rohmer’s Canvas». Boston Review. Archived from the original on 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  5. ^ Roger Ebert (August 20, 1999). «Autumn Tale». Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2010-01-17.
  6. ^ «An Autumn Tale». Artificial Eye. Archived from the original on 26 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-01-17.

External links[edit]

  • Autumn Tale at IMDb
  • Autumn Tale at AllMovie
  • Autumn Tale at Box Office Mojo
  • Autumn Tale at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata
  • Autumn Tale at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Trivia

Осенняя сказка

Original title: Conte d’automne

  • 19981998
  • PGPG
  • 1h 52m

Marie Rivière and Béatrice Romand in Осенняя сказка (1998)

A widow’s best friend tries to find her a new husband, but the ad posted in the newspaper attracts more than one possibility.A widow’s best friend tries to find her a new husband, but the ad posted in the newspaper attracts more than one possibility.A widow’s best friend tries to find her a new husband, but the ad posted in the newspaper attracts more than one possibility.

  • See production, box office & company info

  • See more at IMDbPro

  • Marie Rivière

    Béatrice Romand

    More like this

    Review

    Unfolds in a spirit of playful adventure

    It is autumn in the Rhone valley and grapes are being harvested. Magali (Beatrice Romand), the owner of a small vineyard inherited from her parents, lives alone and attends to her vineyard with the same care she gives to her frizzy black hair. She tells her best friend Isabelle (Marie Riviére), a librarian, that she has no interest in meeting men. «At my age,» she says, «it’s easier to find buried treasure.» Isabelle, however, has her own ideas on the subject and takes out an ad in the local paper to find a suitable partner for her friend. Winner of won the award for Best Screenplay at the Venice Film Festival, Eric Rohmer’s An Autumn Tale, the final film in his Four Seasons series, is about matchmaking but this time it is about the need for companionship of older women with grown children.

    Like many Rohmer films, a complex web of events and relationships arise from seemingly simple acts of friendship. Isabelle meets Gérald (Alain Libolt), a courteous and laid back salesman through her ad and goes to lunch with him a few times enjoying the idea that she can be still be seductive. After toying with the notion of keeping him for herself, she finally confesses that she is happily married and the whole seduction routine was simply a ploy to introduce him to her best friend Magali. The situation becomes further complicated by the desires of Rosine (Alexia Portal), her son Leo’s (Stephane Damon) girlfriend, to set her up with her ex boyfriend Etienne (Diedier Sandre) a philosophy teacher with a penchant for younger women.

    Unaware of the others matchmaking efforts, in a true Shakespearean twist, both Gerard and Etienne are invited to the wedding reception for Isabelle’s daughter Emilia (Arelia Alcais) and the way it works itself out is delightful to observe. None of this of course unfolds according to plan but the beauty of the film is not the plot but the gradual development of complex three-dimensional characters through typically Rohmerian intelligent and witty dialogue. An Autumn Tale, though it contains some fanciful romantic intrigue, unfolds in a spirit of playful adventure, without guile or mean-spiritedness. Like the conclusion of Lindsay Anderson’s O Lucky Man, we smile for no reason and Rohmer leaves us with a dance of joy and a final song: «If life is a journey, we hope your weather’s fair, wild flowers are green and blue, travel safely, all of you».

    • howard.schumann
    • Sep 8, 2006

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    Осенняя сказка
    Осенняя сказка FilmPoster.jpeg
    Режиссер Эрик Ромер
    Автор Эрик Роман
    В главной роли Беатрис Романд. Мари Ривьер.. Алексия Портал
    Кинематография
    Под редакцией
    Распространяется October Films (США)
    Дата выпуска 23 сентября 1998 г. (1998-09-23) (Франция, Бельгия). июль 1999 (США)
    Продолжительность 112 минут
    Страна Франция
    Язык Французский
    Бюджет 2,8 миллиона долларов
    Кассовые сборы 2,2 миллиона долларов

    Осенняя сказка (французский : Conte d’automne ) — французский фильм 1998 года, режиссер Эрик Ромер, Беатрис Романд в главной роли., Мари Ривьер, Дидье Сандр, Алексия Портал и. Это последний фильм Ромера Contes des quatre saisons (Сказки четырех сезонов), в который также входят История весны (1990), История зимы (1992) и Летняя сказка (1996).

    Содержание

    • 1 Сводка
    • 2 Актеры
    • 3 Прием
    • 4 Награды
    • 5 Выпуск DVD
    • 6 Ссылки
    • 7 Внешние ссылки

    Сводка

    Магали (Беатрис Роман), сорока с небольшим лет, виноделка и вдова: она любит свою работу, но чувствует себя одинокой. Ее подруги Розин (Алексия Портал) и Изабель (Мари Ривьер) тайно хотят найти мужа для Магали.

    В ролях

    • Мари Ривьер — Изабель
    • Беатрис Романд — Магали
    • — Жеральд
    • Дидье Сандр — Этьен
    • Алексия Портал — Розина

    Ресепшн

    Sight Sound назвала его «красивым, остроумным и безмятежным фильмом», который «никогда не попадает в ловушку говорящих голов. визуально драматизированы, позволяя динамически выражать философию персонажей (как бы действие фильма). И этот литературный акцент на языке, что-то вроде клише с Ромером, и простота мизансцены опираются на плотный сюжет в традициях мастера Ромера, Хичкока.»

    Стивена Холдена, в отрывках, переизданных после открытия фильма в Нью-Йорке, но первоначально написанных после выхода фильма в 1998 году. Нью-йоркский кинофестиваль назвал фильм «таким же согревающим событием, как осеннее солнце, которое благосклонно светит на виноградник, принадлежащий главному герою фильма., Магали (Беатрис Романд) «; хотя в фильме есть свои «тяжелые моменты» и «за исключением поворотов здесь и там, вы знаете, куда пойдет история», фильм тем не менее «вызывает такую ​​чувственную атмосферу — пение птиц, ветер, свет и тень, которые очерчивают сезон и время суток с поразительной точностью — что вы почти перенесены на поля Магали, где виноград в этом году обещает дать особенно хороший урожай ».

    Boston Review сказал «Осенняя сказка… затмевает своих предшественников [Сказки четырех сезонов]… На протяжении всего этого фильма чувствуется, что и персонажи, и зрители находятся в руках великого психолога — если бы кто-то знал больше о Долина Роны, ее старые города и новые фабрики, можно было бы еще больше оценить, насколько женщины Ромера подходят их местной социальной реальности, которая снимается так же тщательно, как и они сами ».

    Роджер Эберт дал снимать четыре звезды из четырех, говоря: «Хотя мне нравятся голливудские романтические комедии, такие как Ноттинг Хай 11, они как будто носят галоши по сравнению с лукавым остроумием из такого фильма, как «Осенняя сказка». Они мягко топают по своим заводным сюжетам, а Ромер элегантно соблазняет нас людьми, обладающими всей пугающей непредсказуемостью жизни ».

    Награды

    Фильм получил Золотую Оселлу («лучший сценарий») на Венецианском кинофестивале. Он был выбран в качестве лучшего фильма на иностранном языке 1999 года Национальным обществом кинокритиков.

    Выпуск DVD

    В Соединенном Королевстве на Artificial Eye был выпущен DVD region 2 с английскими субтитрами и интервью с писателем. /director.

    Ссылки

    Внешние ссылки

    • Осенняя сказка на IMDb
    • Осенняя сказка в Тухлые помидоры
    • Осенняя сказка в Metacritic
    • Autumn Tale в Box Office Mojo

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