Véronique et son cancre
- Charles L. Bitsch
- 1958 (1958)
Véronique et son cancre (Veronique and Her Dunce)[2] is a short comedy film by Éric Rohmer, which he directed before his series of Six Moral Tales (Contes moraux). It records the meeting of a young woman called Véronique with a difficult boy she has been hired to coach. The encounter raises questions about the value in later life of the teaching used in schools and about the treatment of children who are either unwilling or genuinely unable to learn.
Plot
Véronique arrives to give Jean-Christophe extra tuition. The boy is not enthusiastic, treating her disrespectfully and answering almost every question with an irritating "dunno". In arithmetic it is doubtful if he is grasping the principles, but he throws her off balance with some disconcerting questions. She also has to keep slipping off her new shoes (which she has bought in order to look smart) because they are too tight. When it comes to composition, he seems to lack imagination but again makes some sharp observations. Both are glad when the session ends.
References
- ^ Hertay, Alain (1998). Éric Rohmer: comédies et proverbes (in French). Editions du CEFAL. pp. 139–. ISBN 978-2-87130-058-8. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- ^ Neupert, Richard John (19 February 2007). A history of the French new wave cinema. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 252. ISBN 978-0-299-21704-4. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
External links
- Véronique et son cancre at IMDb
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Six Moral Tales |
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Comedies and Proverbs |
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Tales of the Four Seasons |
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- Présentation ou Charlotte et son steak (1951)
- Véronique et son cancre (1958)
- Les métamorphoses du paysage : l'ère industrielle (1964)
- Les cabinets de physique : la vie de société au 18e siècle (1964)
- Six in Paris (segment "Place de l'Étoile") (1965)
- Les caractères de La Bruyère (1965)
- Les histoires extraordinaires d'Edgar Poe (1965)
- Entretien sur Pascal (1965)
- Louis Lumière / conversation avec Langlois et Renoir (1968)
- Victor Hugo architecte (1969)
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