|
Chloe in the Afternoon (1972, Fr.)
(aka Love in the Afternoon, or L'Amour, L'Après-Midi)
In Eric Rohmer's romantic drama about marriage infidelity
- the 6th film in his "Six Moral Tales" series (from 1962
to 1972), and somewhat similar to F.W. Murnau's Sunrise
(1927):
- the rich escapist, heterosexual fantasy life of
bourgeois (middle-class) Parisian lawyer Frédéric
(Bernard Verley), married for three years to pregnant wife Hélène
(Françoise Verley, her co-star's real-life wife), a suburban
English teacher, who have an infant girl
- the self-absorbed, chauvinistic, girl-watching Frederic's
many flirtations with shop-girls and secretaries, and other attractive
women on the street
- the film's self-referential daydream
fantasy sequence (homage to The Seven Year
Itch (1955)) in which Frederic possessed a magic amulet or
talisman "capable of destroying free will" worn around
his neck - it could conquer a woman by taking away her will-power,
to easily persuade her to have sex; as he sat in a cafe, he watched
through the window as six females passed - some of the stars of the
last three of Rohmer's previous five films - he described them as: "indifferent,
hurried, hesitant, busy, accompanied, alone"
- Frederic approached each of
the six women individually, in a different order, who quickly acquiesed
to his very forward requests to be with him or to kiss him:
- Maud (Françoise Fabian) in My Night at Maud's (1969) "INDIFFERENT"
- Françoise (Marie-Christine Barrault) in My Night at Maud's
(1969) "HESITANT"
- Haydee (Haydée Politoff) in La Collectionneuse (1967) (aka
The Collector) "BUSY"
- Aurora (Aurora Cornu) in Le Genou de Claire (1970) (aka
Claire's Knee) "ALONE"
- Claire (Laurence de Monaghan) in Le Genou de Claire
(1970) (aka Claire's Knee) "ACCOMPANIED"
- Laura (Béatrice Romand) in Le Genou de Claire (1970) (aka
Claire's Knee) "HURRIED"
- however, when the amulet malfunctioned and stopped
blinking, he was berated by Laura: ("You won't talk me into
it....Why should I go with you?")
- Frederic's growing friendship with calculating and
seductive, devious, sexually free-spirited bohemian Chloé (Zouzou,
a real-life model and rock groupie), his friend Bruno's ex-lover
with suicidal tendencies; Chloe claimed to work as a bargirl at the
sleazy Agamemnon
- tempted by the manipulative but lost soul Chloe,
he assisted her in acquiring a better job, and spent many furtive
afternoons with her during his lunch break, slowly being lured to
take her as his mistress and become unfaithful to his wife
- the erotic sequence during Frederic's first visit
to Chloe's apartment, when she asked ("Isn't it nice here?")
and then entered into his embrace on the bed; as he hugged her, he
lifted her shirt and gently stroked her bare back; although he was
becoming emotionally attached to her, he spoke about his strong marital
relationship: "You know, I'm very much in love with my wife
right now"; she was miffed: "I know, if you love her, then
don't come here"; Frederic admitted his dilemma: "I'm so
attracted to you, I wonder if I can resist. My will is shaken. I
sometimes wonder if we shouldn't go to bed together. Is it possible
to love two women at once? Is that normal?"; she responded: "Depends
on what you call love. Love with passion, no. But passion doesn't
last. If you mean sleeping with several girls, even caring for them,
nothing is more banal, everybody does it. Actually, polygamy is natural";
he disagreed: "Polygamy, that's barbarian, the enslavement of
women"
"Love in the Afternoon" Between Frederic
and Chloe
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- shortly later, in a more sensual sequence in her
apartment, Chloe emerged nude from the shower (a parallel scene
to the one in the opening with his wife Helene), and asked Frederic
to towel her off: "You can kiss me. Water doesn't stain. Dry
me. Do it right. Really dry me"; after a passionate kiss in
return, she reclined on the bed awaiting Frederic for sex, while
posing as the famous portrait of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres'
concubine in La Grande Odalisque; as Frederic prepared to
undress and commit adultery, he paused as he removed his turtleneck
over his head (a reminder of his domestic life) in front of the
bathroom mirror - and impulsively decided to not be unfaithful
and abruptly return to his stable and intelligent wife; he quietly
exited and fled down the five flights of stairs (seen from an overhead
POV, reminiscent of Hitchcock's Vertigo
(1958)) to his office where he called Helene and told her
that he was returning home early
- the concluding sequence - in his home on the sofa
with Helene, he complimented her on her intimidating beauty: ("I'm
sitting next to you and you make me shy because you're so beautiful
- You've never been so beautiful...you make me shy because I love
you"), and confusedly apologized for their lack of closeness:
("I don't want you to think it's coldness"); Helene countered:
("I'm the one who's cold. Much more than you. You're perfect");
he also expressed how he felt about not confiding in her more: ("I
feel guilty because I don't talk to you much, confide in you");
as she began crying, he hugged her to comfort and calm her - and
awkwardly began unzipping the back of her dress for "love in
the afternoon" since the au pair was out with the children
until 5 pm; she suggested: "Let's go into the bedroom"
- the final image of the 'happy ending' - a pan from
the sofa over to a serene shot looking out the window of their living
room - symbolizing their staid 'bourgeois' life, but asking the question:
had Frederic been cured of his wanderings and aloofness to Helene?
|
Frederic with Helene
Magic Amulet
The Amulet's Power Over Women
With Chloe
Vertigo (1958) Homage
Concluding Sequence: Frederic at Home With Helene
Final Image
|