Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
Create 2024-12-02-my-night-with-maud.md
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
  • Loading branch information
bfi-prog-notes authored Nov 28, 2024
1 parent 9220bcd commit 76dcdc2
Showing 1 changed file with 123 additions and 0 deletions.
123 changes: 123 additions & 0 deletions _posts/2024-12-02-my-night-with-maud.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
---
layout: post
title: My Night with Maud
published: false
date: 2024-12-02
readtime: true
categories: ['BIG SCREEN CLASSICS']
tags: [Drama]
metadata: 'France 1969, 110 mins<br> Director: Eric Rohmer'
pdf: '2024-12-02-my-night-with-maud.pdf'
---

**SPOILER WARNING** The following notes give away some of the plot.

Eric Rohmer had made two features and a sizeable number of shorts and documentaries before _My Night with Maud_ (1969), a mature and complex work detailing the friction between personal belief and amorous desire. Though foreshadowed by the melancholy _Le Signe du lion_ (1962) and the calculated _La Collectionneuse_ (1967), it was _My Night with Maud_ that would fully embody the director’s cinematic style: a wandering form that dealt explicitly with relationships in all their complexity.

_My Night with Maud_ follows several young, conversational characters in the provincial French town of Clermont-Ferrand. Jean-Louis (Jean-Louis Trintignant) is a strict Catholic who has taken an engineering job in the town after several years abroad. When at church during mass near Christmas, he chances upon Françoise (Marie-Christine Barrault) who he somehow knows he’ll marry. After a chance meeting with an old school friend, Vidal (Antoine Vitez), he ends up back at the apartment of Maud (Françoise Fabian), the divorcee Vidal is seeing. They discuss the contradictions in their moral, theological and political views. With Vidal leaving Jean-Louis to stay the night at Maud’s after a heavy snowstorm, tensions rise with the potential of a night’s romance. However, the interconnected lives of all of the characters will come back to haunt them many years later.

‘I like people who know what they want,’ suggests Maud after a brief and confused fragment of passionate embrace. Jean-Louis stopped before going further. His clinically rigid doctrine of belief held him back. Rohmer’s film, and its characters generally, are all grappling with a variety of contradictions dictating their actions and desires: reason and instinct, fate and free will, belief and atheism. While Jean-Louis has forced himself into a cage, going full throttle only when his instinct is totally sure (as in the case of deciding, at first sight, that he will marry Françoise), it also means his sense of free will is a masquerade at best. His life, as he sees it, is seemingly as neat as the mathematical formulae on which he works in various cafés. Love, to him, is an equation.

The film is really about realising the divergent paths that lives and relationships can travel down. But Rohmer’s cinema is also about the needs, fears and desires that influence the decision of which path to take, even when it results in a dead end. That questioning found its form in _My Night with Maud_. The details of relationships, and the sense of inevitability that comes with Rohmer’s ubiquitous pairings, can be seen everywhere in his cinema, from the brutal machinations of _Claire’s Knee_ (1970) to the strange colour-coded jumper-matching conclusion of _My Girlfriend’s Boyfriend_ (1987). This unstoppable momentum of relationships, even when undermined as it is in _My Night with Maud_, is a driving force in Rohmer’s films.

The energy from said momentum, whether accepted or resisted, has to find somewhere to go. In Rohmer’s films this seems to manifest itself in two key actions: deeply detailed conversations (sometimes descending into heated debates) and the incessant meandering of his characters. The latter seems to accelerate the likelihood of essential chance meetings between people, usually on foot.

In the case of this film, they’ve been stopped by the weather, rendering the town a beautiful snowy vista and difficult to traverse. Rohmer gets around this by having Jean-Louis travel in from his isolated retreat, chancing once again upon his fated future wife on the road rather than the pavement. The snow then handily delays her motorised bike and allows for the vital night at Françoise’s after the night at Maud’s.

Maud is radical in Jean-Louis’ eyes due to her status as a divorcee, living by instinct and drive rather than within some hollow moral doctrine. Her sense of being is at friction with fate, radical even before her atheism and her possible left-wing politics (supposedly inherited from her bourgeois family) are addressed.

Perhaps this is why Jean-Louis resists, flees and avoids the impulses which, by his own admission, he would have once followed. He does have brief moments of reconciliation and a flicker of what their relationship could have been later in the film. But, as he suggests himself: ‘I never had luck with brief encounters.’ The pathos is almost unbearable, with Jean-Louis sticking to his flawed doctrine even though Maud and the audience can see that they are perfect together, contrary to all universal logic.

Instead, it’s Françoise who seemingly fulfils his strict codes, based on an almost mathematical assessment of how future relationships will work.
Of course, his own fate was blind to him, pure mathematics duping him into believing in a fixed answer to a question in which the raw numbers – the people – are in constant flux. Though Rohmer leaves the film before the conclusion of such a fate can be shown, it is clear that a similar future to Maud’s awaits him: a flawed relationship almost definitely due to end. This is marked by a final, happy run into the warm sea at the film’s conclusion – a tainted happiness.

It’s only five years later, thanks to another chance meeting, that all of this becomes apparent, and Rohmer concludes his film with a brilliant undermining of his main character’s beliefs. Jean-Louis and Françoise, married and with child, make their way down to a summer beach. They bump into Maud on the way, her conversation with Jean-Louis revealing the complex intermingling of Françoise with Maud’s unseen husband in the naive days when snow lay over Clermont-Ferrand. Jean-Louis’ careful and meticulous reasoning, built on a moment of false instinct, comes crumbling down. The questions slowly appear, as if the summer sun had melted the winter’s ice and revealed the truth behind all of their relationships. The weather in the scene may be warmer but the frosty undercurrents remain.
**Adam Scovell, bfi.org.uk, 11 June 2019**
<br>

**MY NIGHT WITH MAUD (MA NUIT CHEZ MAUD)**
_Director:_ Eric Rohmer
_Production Companies:_ Les Films du Losange (Paris), Firmament Films Productions, Les Films du Carrosse, Les Films des Deux Mondes, Les Films de la Pléiade, Productions de la Guéville, Renn Productions, Simar Films
_Presented by:_ Barbet Schroeder, Pierre Cottrell
_Production:_ Alfred de Graaff
_Production [Assistant]:_ Pierre Grimberg
_Assistant Director:_ Pierre Cottrell *
_Screenplay:_ Eric Rohmer
_Director of Photography:_ Nestor Almendros
_Photography [Assistants]:_ Emmanuel Machuel, Jean-Claude Gasché, Philippe Rousselot
_Editor:_ Cécile Decugis
_[Assistant] Editor:_ Christine Lecouvette
_Décors:_ Nicole Rachline
_Sound:_ Jacques Maumont, Jean-Pierre Ruh
_Sound [Assistant]:_ Alain Sempé

**Cast**
Jean-Louis Trintignant _(Jean-Louis)_
Françoise Fabian _(Maud)_
Marie-Christine Barrault _(Françoise)_
Antoine Vitez _(Vidal)_
Léonide Kogan _(violinist)_
Guy Léger _(preacher)_
Anne Dubot _(blonde)_

France 1969
110 mins
Digital

\* Uncredited
<br>
**BIG SCREEN CLASSICS**

**Little Women**
Sun 1 Dec 18:10; Mon 16 Dec 14:30; Fri 20 Dec 17:50
**My Night with Maud** Ma nuit chez Maud
Mon 2 Dev 18:10; Thu 5 Dec 12:20; Tue 17 Dec 20:30
**Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence**
Tue 3 Dec 20:35; Sat 21 Dec 14:50
**When Harry Met Sally**
Wed 4 Dec 18:10 + intro by Ruby McGuigan, BFI Programme and Acquisitions; Fri 20 Dec 20:50; Sun 22 Dec 12:15
**Torch Song Trilogy**
Fri 6 Dec 18:05; Fri 13 Dec 20:30
**Female Trouble**
Fri 6 Dec 20:50; Wed 18 Dec 20:50; Sun 29 Dec 18:30
**Fanny and Alexander** Fanny och Alexander
Sat 7 Dec 19:30; Sun 29 Dec 14:15
**The City of Lost Children** La Cité des enfants perdus
Sun 8 Dec 15:15; Fri 27 Dec 20:45
**Tangerine**
Mon 9 Dec 20:45; Sat 21 Dec 20:45
**Monty Python’s Life of Brian**
Wed 11 Dec 18:10 + intro by Justin Johnson, BFI Lead Programmer, Thu 19 Dec 12:30; Sun 22 Dec 18:30
**Carol**
Thu 12 Dec 12:20; Sat 21 Dec 20:40; Mon 30 Dec 17:50
**Eyes Wide Shut**
Sat 14 Dec 20:00; Wed 18 Dec 17:40; Sat 28 Dec 17:00
**Goodfellas**
Sun 15 Dec 17:50; Mon 23 Dec 20:10; Sat 28 Dec 20:15
<br>

**SIGHT AND SOUND**<br>
Never miss an issue with _Sight and Sound_, the BFI’s internationally renowned film magazine. Subscribe from just £25*<br>
*Price based on a 6-month print subscription (UK only). More info: [**sightandsoundsubs.bfi.org.uk**](https://sightandsoundsubs.bfi.org.uk/subscribe)

<img style="float: left;" src="/img/sight-and-sound.jpg" width="40%" height="40%"><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>

**BFI SOUTHBANK**
Welcome to the home of great film and TV, with three cinemas and a studio, a world-class library, regular exhibitions and a pioneering Mediatheque with 1000s of free titles for you to explore. Browse special-edition merchandise in the BFI Shop.We&#39;re also pleased to offer you a unique new space, the BFI Riverfront – with unrivalled riverside views of Waterloo Bridge and beyond, a delicious seasonal menu, plus a stylish balcony bar for cocktails or special events. Come and enjoy a pre-cinema dinner or a drink on the balcony as the sun goes down.

**BECOME A BFI MEMBER**
Enjoy a great package of film benefits including priority booking at BFI Southbank and BFI Festivals. Join today at [**bfi.org.uk/join**](http://www.bfi.org.uk/join)

**BFI PLAYER**
We are always open online on BFI Player where you can watch the best new, cult &amp; classic cinema on demand. Showcasing hand-picked landmark British and independent titles, films are available to watch in three distinct ways: Subscription, Rentals &amp; Free to view.

See something different today on [**player.bfi.org.uk**](https://player.bfi.org.uk)

Join the BFI mailing list for regular programme updates. Not yet registered? Create a new account at [**www.bfi.org.uk/signup**](http://www.bfi.org.uk/signup)

**Programme notes and credits compiled by Sight and Sound and the BFI Documentation Unit
Notes may be edited or abridged
Questions/comments? Contact the Programme Notes team by [email](mailto: [email protected])**
<!--stackedit_data:
eyJoaXN0b3J5IjpbLTY3MDY4ODk2NV19
-->

0 comments on commit 76dcdc2

Please sign in to comment.