The Bakery Girl of Monceau
7.8 /10 1 Votes
7.2/10 Genre Romance, Short Screenplay Eric Rohmer | 7.6/10 IMDb 84% Director Eric Rohmer Film series Six Moral Tales Duration | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release date 1963 (1963) Cast (Young Man / Narrator), (Sylvie), Claudine Soubrier (Jacqueline), Michel Mardore , Fred Junk Similar movies Inglourious Basterds , Mission: Impossible , Now You See Me , Ratatouille , Pacific Rim , The Bourne Ultimatum |
Rohmer retrospective 02 the bakery girl of monceau 1963 movie review
The Bakery Girl of Monceau or The Girl at the Monceau Bakery is a 1963 film by Éric Rohmer. The original French title is La Boulangère de Monceau. The film was the first of Rohmer's Six Moral Tales (Contes moraux), which consisted of two shorts and four feature films.
Contents
- Rohmer retrospective 02 the bakery girl of monceau 1963 movie review
- Cast
- Plot
- Narrative structure
- Meaning of Moral
- Themes
- Setting
- Sound
- References
Cast
Plot
The main character is played by Barbet Schroeder, but was dubbed by Bertrand Tavernier, whose voice Rohmer judged more appropriate for the very literary voice-over.
The structure of the film is about a man who sees and falls in love with a woman he passes by in the street, but he doesn't know how to talk to her. When he finally speaks to her, she disappears and he begins a daily search for her in the area that he has seen her in. During his search, he begins a habit of stopping in a bakery to buy a snack. Over time, the "girl" in the bakery becomes interested in him and he starts flirting with her, and, eventually, convinces her to go on a date with him. Before the date begins, however, he runs into the woman that he was originally searching for and is forced to choose.
Narrative structure
The narrative structure of The Girl at the Monceau Bakery and the other five "Moral Tales" begins with the main character (a man), who is committed to a woman, meeting and being tempted by a second woman, but renouncing her for the first woman.
Meaning of "Moral"
According to Rohmer:
My intention was not to film raw events, but the narrative that someone makes of them. The story, the choice of facts, their organization... not the treatment that I could have made them submit to. One of the reasons that these Tales are called "Moral" is that physical actions are almost completely absent: everything happens in the head of the narrator.
Most of the film is told through the narrator.
Using the word "moral" does not mean that there is a moral in the story. According to Rohmer:
So Contes Moraux doesn't really mean that there's a moral contained in them, even though there might be one and all the characters in these films act according to certain moral ideas that are fairly clearly worked out.
Also, Rohmer said:
They are films which a particular feeling is analyzed and where even the characters themselves analyze their feelings and are very introspective. That's what Conte Moral means.
Themes
Setting
In each of the Six Moral Tales, Rohmer only filmed during the time and in the place that the film was set. There was no use of sets.
Sound
There is no nondiegetic music, only what is played in the background as part of the setting (i.e., cars, people walking by, music playing in the background at a party). Also, there is an emphasis on dialogue and frequent use of voice-over narration. The Girl at the Monceau Bakery contains no music, and the only sound that interrupts the sounds in the background is that of the narrator.
References
The Bakery Girl of Monceau WikipediaThe Bakery Girl of Monceau Rotten TomatoesThe Bakery Girl of Monceau LetterboxdThe Bakery Girl of Monceau IMDb The Bakery Girl of Monceau themoviedb.org