SFIFF Review: The Romance of Astrea and Celadon
Filed under: Foreign Language, New Releases, Theatrical Reviews, Festival Reports, San Francisco International Film Festival

If nothing else, Eric Rohmer's The Romance of Astrea and Celadon raises many interesting questions about the nature of the auteur theory and film canons in general. Rohmer is a certified auteur, and a world master. He has made many, many good films and a few great ones, especially when adding entries to his three celebrated series: "Six Moral Tales" (in the 1960s and 1970s), "Comedies and Proverbs" (six films in the 1980s) and "Tales of the Four Seasons" (in the 1990s).
These films, which often have a relaxed, al fresco quality, mainly focus on young, smart, attractive contemporary French people who talk a lot get themselves into romantic situations. When he departs from this successful formula, as with his last two films, The Lady and the Duke (2001) and Triple Agent (2004), the results are considerably less. So when a filmmaker like Rohmer makes something as blatantly, painfully awful as The Romance of Astrea and Celadon, it brings such ideas into sharp relief.
Given Rohmer's status, should we spend extra time scrutinizing this turkey for something hidden, something worthwhile that perhaps escaped our gaze? Moreover, shouldn't filmmakers be allowed to depart from a successful formula? For example, Charlie Chaplin established himself as a master comedian, and when he attempted a drama, A Woman of Paris (1923), audiences responded with anger, boredom and indifference.
But to consider this a bad film presupposes that we, the audience, have identified and solidified who this filmmaker is and who they are not. In The Romance of Astrea and Celadon, which had its West Coast premiere at the 51st San Francisco International Film Festival, Rohmer has one or two vague things to say about the interchangeable nature of boys and girls (one of his mid-1980s titles was Boyfriends and Girlfriends), but regardless of who he is, his way of saying it is positively inane.
Adapted from a novel by Honoré d'Urfé, The Romance of Astrea and Celadon takes place in the 17th century among a group of male and female shepherds. The hero, Celadon (Andy Gillet) loves the heroine Astrea (Stéphanie Crayencour) and she loves him back. But because of bad blood between their families, their love is not socially acceptable.
At a feast, Celadon pretends to kiss another girl to allay suspicion, but Astrea takes his charade seriously and accuses him of cheating. He practically withers from despair and jumps in the river to kill himself. It's at this point that we begin to realize that the long-haired, pretty-faced Celadon, who wears a kind of knee-length dress, is actually more of a girl than a boy. (A passive, helpless girl at that.) He spends the film whimpering, whining, fretting and sulking. The only thing missing is a scene of him weeping while watching "Oprah" and asking someone to open a tight jar lid for him.
Needless to say, he survives his pathetic suicide; a trio of nymphs (!) rescues him and nurses him back to health. One of the nymphs falls for him, but he rebuffs her. He instead escapes to the woods where he proceeds to sulk. (Since Astrea told him she never wanted to see him again, he decides to remain true to her wishes. Way to be a man!) He even builds a shrine to her. (For some reason, he has a color photograph of her in a locket. What did he do? Build a camera out of straw?)
Another of the nymphs has an uncle, a druid, who gets the idea to disguise Celadon as his own daughter, so that he can see Astrea again. Meanwhile, Astrea weeps over her error and her friends talk a lot about the nature of love. One guy, who also wears a dress, talks about being "one" with his girlfriend. Another guy, who bugs out his eyes and cackles while reading his dialogue (and grins maniacally, Harpo Marx-style, when silent), claims that to love a number of women makes one happier. Could Celadon have found his feminine side throughout the course of the film? Not likely, since he's pretty girly throughout. Is he "at one" with Astrea? Once again, this is something that is never in doubt.
The main trouble is that The Romance of Astrea and Celadon should have depended on grand passions and sweeping gestures; everyone should be swooning instead of talking about and rationalizing their love. Rohmer's usual method just simply doesn't work with this fluffy costume/period material. He's a modern filmmaker, concerned with the minutiae of modern relationships, such as the conundrum of Claire's Knee (1970): a man on the verge of marriage obsesses about caressing a younger woman's knee. Should he, or shouldn't he? Or Chloe in the Afternoon (1972): does having a late lunch several times with a sexy woman constitute an affair?
Rohmer can usually make an entire film out of something small, some simple, but ultimately complicated romantic tangle. And yes, Rohmer should be allowed to try different things. But trying to intellectually justify a man not returning to his lover after a life-or-death ordeal just because she shouted at him very simply doesn't work.









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-28-2008 @ 8:31AM
gradnick said...
Rohmer’s final film is proving to be quite an audience divider, and on the basis of the majority of negative reviews it has garnered I would go as far to say that it’s doing a sterling job exposing the perceptual limitations of many critics and reviewers. Don’t get me wrong, a good critic is worth their weight in incisive cine-analysis, but they are a much rarer breed than is healthy for an art-form that is perpetually undermined by the imperceptive, often anti-intellectual twaddle of would-be film commentators who frequently fail to recognise the real thing when it flickers in front of them for 109 blatantly obvious minutes. To an imperceptive eye, The Romance of Astrea and Celadon could easily be misread as the “painfully awful turkey” Jeffrey M. Anderson takes it for. Mr Anderson implies that to scrutinize the film for “something hidden, something worthwhile that perhaps escaped our gaze”, would be a folly, presumably because the film offers little more than what in his opinion appears to be obvious and shallow. He concedes that Rohmer should be allowed to try different things, but says that to attempt to justify “a man not returning to his lover after a life-or-death ordeal just because she shouted at him very simply doesn't work”. As an amusing exaggeration, this final comment is fine as far as eliciting a chuckle goes, but it is misleading. Celadon’s refusal to return to his lover is (within the terms of his code of honour) an act of love. This may be hard for 21st century viewers (or reviewers) to understand, but Rohmer expects his audience to give Caledon the benefit of the doubt, if only for the sake of seeing where the logic (and anachronistic purity) of his stance will take him. And it takes him into some strange territory indeed.
The first thing a viewer must do when approaching this film is to bear in mind that Rohmer offers it as his final film, knowing full well that a self-declared swansong is going to be viewed as his final artistic utterance, and a possible summation of his oeuvre. Likewise, it behoves the film commentator to give careful consideration to this work, lest their hasty misjudgements betray them. Rohmer has proven time and again that he is an insightful observer of human foibles and self-deception, so if one is tempted to dismiss the final work of a long-standing master of subtle and perceptive observations as a failure, one ought to have a darn firm handle on the piece. It seems that Rohmer (like Dreyer before him) may well end up having the last laugh - his ultimate and most subtle expose of human foibles may in fact reach well beyond his young characters to those who too quickly misjudge his final, perceptive offering.
Taking the form of a pastorale and bucolic romantic fable that recalls the mythic games played by gods intent on manipulating the lowly passions and concerns of humans for their amusement (here reflected by druids and nymphs, but subtly implicating the viewer as well), Rohmer’s film has the appearance of an anachronistic concoction, seemingly as light and as frivolous as the wispy fabric that falls from the shoulders of the fresh young damsels paraded before us, but which conceals a thematically very modern examination of innocence and gullibility in the face of the persuasive power of authoritative and manipulative forces. It is a film that is primarily critical of intolerance (particularly sexual intolerance), and of the multiplicity of specious notions that propagate ignorance so as to manipulate and control. Rohmer espouses these ideas in an almost subliminal manner, located behind a deft lightness of touch, a genuine charm, and deliciously knowing wit. The underlying seriousness of his preoccupations is balanced by an equally strong and abiding faith in the clarifying and transformative power of genuine love. That love rules out at the end of this film constitutes a rare happy ending within Rohmer’s oeuvre, and ending that leaves us in no doubt about the point Rohmer ultimately wants to make. For one to confuse the gaiety and deliberate naivety of this ending with the facile tropes of mainstream cinema is to miss the quietly profound and gentle wisdom lurking just below the surface.
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