tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3552793787451945445.post6553859138361576756..comments2024-02-29T04:17:49.546-06:00Comments on Toronto Film Review: Éric Rohmer’s Early Cahiers InterviewsDavid D.http://www.blogger.com/profile/14646599764019358808noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3552793787451945445.post-13832384634670876642015-02-07T09:06:22.852-06:002015-02-07T09:06:22.852-06:00Hi Gregory, Thanks for this information. That'...Hi Gregory, Thanks for this information. That's even worst that they did not allow you to include these - they are fascinating, and important to understand Rohmer's development and his relationship with the mag. I'll have to check our the de Baecque interview, sounds interesting. Best, DavidDavid D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14646599764019358808noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3552793787451945445.post-72059554509760494842015-02-07T06:18:30.682-06:002015-02-07T06:18:30.682-06:00Hi, thanks for these fascinating insights - Rohmer...Hi, thanks for these fascinating insights - Rohmer's love of ecology surfaces again and demonstrates his 'different' political stance that anticipates later developments (and also is addressed in one of his most explicitly political films, L'Arbre, le Maire et le Mediatheque). As the author of Eric Rohmer Interviews, I would just like to explain that we would have loved to include Cahiers interviews but sadly the publishers who now own copyright (Hachette) refused us permission, point blank. We fought hard and managed to get a later interview published - a 1993 interview with Antoine de Baecque which discusses Rohmer's 'amateur' aesthetic. The 1970 interview is available in full in English on the Senses of Cinema website.Gregory Peckhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17346246404690119373noreply@blogger.com