French director Rohmer dies aged 89 after 50 years of work

ÉRIC ROHMER, the French film-maker who was a key figure of the postwar New Wave cinema movement, has died at the age of 89.

ÉRIC ROHMER, the French film-maker who was a key figure of the postwar New Wave cinema movement, has died at the age of 89.

After a hugely influential career spanning half a century and 50 films, he died yesterday morning in Paris, his production company said.

A novelist, teacher and critic as well as a director, Rohmer gained international acclaim for Ma Nuit Chez Maud (My Night at Maud's), which was nominated for an Oscar for Best Screenplay in 1969. His best-known films include the quartet Tales of Four Seasons(1990-1998) and Claire's Knee, which won the San Sebastian film festival in 1970.

Rohmer was born Jean-Marie Maurice Schérer in Nancy, eastern France, in 1920. After a brief spell as a teacher, he turned to writing about movies, founding La Gazette du Cinémawith future New Wave directors Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut and Jacques Rivette in 1950. He was later editor-in-chief of Cahiers du Cinéma, the bible of the New Wave, whose directors shunned the constraints of classical cinema to create a more edgy, improvised style.

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His penchant for films that portrayed the angst-ridden inner lives of their characters without adding extraneous drama won him critics as well as admirers. The American actor Gene Hackman, playing a private eye in a 1975 Hollywood movie, dropped the line that a Rohmer film “was kind of like watching paint dry”. But for others, he was an aesthete, a masterful analyst of human relationships and one of the most influential of French film-makers.

“Rohmer’s films never contain any obvious attention-getting devices such as violence, unusual camera angles or even musical scores,” wrote biographer Terry Ballard. “ films that deal with foibles and relationships of realistic if self-absorbed people.”

Referring to his celebrated series of films Six Contes Moraux (Six Moral Tales), Rohmer wrote: "What I call a conte moralis not a tale with a moral, but a story which deals less with what people do than with what is going on in their minds while they are doing it. You can say that my work is closer to the novel – to a certain classic style of novel which the cinema is now taking over – than to other forms of entertainment, like the theatre."

A man with a reputation for assiduously guarding his privacy, Rohmer started a new series of films at the age of 70 and continued to work until very recently, winning critical success in 1999, at the age of 79, with his Conte d'Automne (A Tale of Autumn).Rohmer received a coveted Golden Lion for his achievements at the Venice festival in 2001.