Summary
Trainee designer Louise lives with her boyfriend, Rémi, in the outskirts of Paris.
Whilst Rémi wants to get married, Louise is reluctant to let go of her freedom,
and so she starts to spend part of her time in her apartment in the centre of Paris, believing
this will strengthen their relationship. Things do not go quite as planned, however.
Bored with her new solitary life in Paris, Louise sees more of her writer friend, Octave,
and starts to flirt with a young musician, Bastien...
Review
He who has two women loses his soul. He who has two houses loses his mind. This
is the proverb around which the fourth film in Eric Rohmer’s series of Comédies
et proverbes is based. As in the other films in this series, Les Nuits de
la pleine lune is largely concerned with a young woman who has an excessively idealistic
notion about love which sends her in an unexpected direction. Here, that woman is
one of Rohmer’s most sophisticated and complex heroines, played with an unusual mix of
sensuality and sensitivity by Pascale Ogier (the daughter of Bulle Ogier).
The film also features a pleasing performance from Fabrice Luchini, whose unceasing intellectual
ruminations provide much of the film’s comedy. His on-screen rival is played by
Christian Vadim, who is perhaps (unfairly) best known as the love child of Catherine Deneuve
and director Roger Vadim.
Compared with most of Rohmer’s other films, certainly those in the Comédies
et proverbes series, Les Nuits de la pleine lune is a melancholic work, shot
with an almost Bresson-like austerity. The film is punctuated by long pauses of
silence as the heroine Louise reflects on her situation and decides on her next course
of action, whilst the sombre photography (predominantly an ethereal blue) helps to create
a mood of solemnity which emphasises Louise’s isolation.
The film also has a supernatural dimension (i.e. references to the full moon influencing
Louise’s behaviour), which is a recurring feature of Rohmer’s films. Here, this
is perhaps intended merely to suggest that subconscious impulses rather than conscious
thought is what is motivating Louise’s actions. Maybe she moves into her new apartment
in anticipation that her relationship with her boyfriend Rémi might be starting
to fall apart?
© James Travers 2002
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