Misplaced Pages

The Tree, the Mayor and the Mediatheque

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from L'Arbre, le maire et la médiathèque) 1993 film by Éric Rohmer
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "The Tree, the Mayor and the Mediatheque" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
The Tree, the Mayor and the Mediatheque
Theatrical release poster
FrenchL'Arbre, le maire et la médiathèque
Directed byÉric Rohmer
Written byÉric Rohmer
Produced byFrançoise Etchegaray
Starring
CinematographyDiane Baratier
Edited byMary Stephen
Music bySébastien Erms
Production
company
Compagnie Éric Rohmer
Distributed byLes Films du Losange
Release date
  • 10 February 1993 (1993-02-10) (France)
Running time105 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

The Tree, the Mayor and the Mediatheque (French: L'Arbre, le maire et la médiathèque; known also as Les sept hasards) is a 1993 French comedy-drama film written and directed by Éric Rohmer. The film was shown at the 1993 Montreal World Film Festival where it received the FIPRESCI prize.

The frame story involves the mayor of an isolated French village who, to further his political ambitions, secures a grant to build a sporting and cultural centre, but the necessary felling of a fine willow outrages the schoolteacher and his daughter. Within the frame there is much debate about the current state of France: city versus country, agriculture versus industry, conservatism versus progress, the environment versus growth.

Plot

In Saint-Juire-Champgillon, a remote village of traditional left-wing adherence in the Vendée, Julien Dechaumes has inherited the manor house and grounds and has been elected mayor, though he spends much of his time in Paris with his mistress. There he successfully lobbies the Ministry of Culture for a grant to build a state-of-the-art sports and media centre. By enhancing his reputation in the area, it will boost his chances of entering national politics under the socialist banner.

Opinion in the village is mixed, with the most passionate opposition coming from the schoolteacher, for whom the destruction of a 100-year-old willow symbolises all that is wrong about the plan. When a journalist on a left-wing magazine visits the village to talk to people, her editor cuts her piece to focus on the teacher and the tree. The teacher's ten-year-old daughter explains to the mayor that all the children want is not the sophisticated facilities on offer but just green space and trees. A survey reveals that the water table has dropped alarmingly, needing costly groundworks that make the whole project unviable.

Cast

External links

Éric Rohmer
Feature films
Six Moral Tales
Comedies and Proverbs
Tales of the Four Seasons
Short films
Works about


Stub icon

This article related to a French film of the 1990s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: