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Detectives in Cognac
by Norman Mark
I'm standing in the midst
of mass confusion of Orly Airport near
Paris waiting chartered airplane to take me to the 14th annual Thriller Film
Festival of Cognac (Festival du Film
Policier). I look at the small printed
program for the four-day celebration of fine spirits and detective movies and I
see that there will be a "conference de presse de Gregory Peck."
I exclaim to my wife,
"Looks like Gregory Peck will actually be there in person."
Grace, ever the essence of
savoir faire, quickly chucks me in the ribs. I glance up. Peck, looking
dignified and terribly legendary, is standing less than three feet away. Peck smiles and nods.
Fortunately, I had said nothing about the
phony-looking whale in "Moby Dick."
The festival had
started. Cognac is a small town on the Charente River about 250 miles
southwest of Paris just north of the Bordeaux district. Since the 17th century, this picturesque,
ancient, perfectly French and decidedly sleepy village has been devoted to
taking the local, rather insipid wine and turning it into a double-distilled,
oak-barrel aged nectar.
Although well worth visiting
at any time, Cognac arouses itself on two occasions each year--during the fall
for the harvest of the grapes and for four days each spring for a film festival
which celebrates detectives. During
that festival, which is usually scheduled in April for the weekend after the
American Oscars, almost everyone in town grabs their Instamatics,
children and dogs, and goes batty for thriller movies. The Cognac Film Festival, one of over 170
festivals in film-mad France, becomes a unique and thoroughly charming
experience.
The festival, and the fall harvest time, can easily be
booked through a Travel Agents International office.
As actor Keith Carradine, who
served as a judge one year, told me, "I never want to leave. This festival, this town, this entire
experience has been perfect."
A sculpture resembling a gigantic reel of film had been
placed in the fountain at the center of town. One night, while bands at adjoining bistros dueled by covering either
the Beatles or the Rolling Stones, Buster Keaton silent films were projected on
the buildings surrounding the circle.
Talk about a time warp. This same central roundabout has a statue of Francois the First who
united France. He was born in 1494 in
the Chateau de Cognac, an ancient structure now owned by Otard Cognac and an
easy walk from the central roundabout. We visited and saw the magnificent vaults in the double central
room. Prisoners from the French-Indian
Wars in America were housed here. Their
graffiti remains carved into the walls proving that many of man's bad habits
are unchanged through the ages.
During the festival, I
alternated movie going with the free tours of the Hennessy, Remy-Martin,
Martell and other nearby distilleries where the twice-distilled wine is aged in
oak casks for up to half a century before it emerges as true cognac. At the ancient Martell chateau (and at every
other cognac distillery), I was told that the heady aroma pervading the old
walls came from evaporation that occurs during that lengthy process. My very French guide proudly informed me,
"That is the angel's share."
The next day I visited the smaller, but just as proud
Brillet winery where I tasted their softly delicious 50- and 100-year old
cognacs. I asked Jean-Louis Brillet,
the ninth generation Brillet to run the enterprise, how it felt to open a
50-year old cask, which was a legacy from a great-grandfather he had never
meet. He said it evoked an intense
feeling of connections through the generations.
Also just outside Cognac, we visited the Chateau du Fontpinot, owned by Max Cointreau, whose family produces
the exquisite Cognac Frapin. Mr. and
Mrs. Cointreau were living in another chateau up the road. That was when we learned what must be the
essence of high style--owning not merely one beautiful chateau, but a guest chateau as well.
 Throughout the film festival,
there were events guaranteed to put foreign visitors into charm overload. One afternoon, amidst brass bands and
enthusiastic townspeople, the judges, Gregory Peck and various French celebrities
including pouting soap opera stars marched to the center of town to put their
hands in wet cement. On another
afternoon, everyone marched behind a band dressed like '30s gangsters to the
market where each kiosk was serving hors d'oeuvres, wine and cognac.
The concluding ceremonies at
the festival were completed in less than 20 minutes--some three hours shorter
than any Oscar telecast. In Cognac,
they do understand the adage that "less is more." Then everyone raced out of the theater to
dress for the formal, final gala in the Martell distilleries beneath the
gleaming, distinctive goose-necked cognac stills.
This charming film fest ended
as I organized a circle of dancers and convinced the dignified former CEO of
Hennessy to wiggle his bootie to "Sweet Home Chicago."
What a night! What a Festival du Film Policier! Ah Cognac, tres
charmante!
All tours of distilleries can be arranged quite easily by
either showing up or calling ahead. A
few of the local phone numbers are:
Brillet: (33) 5 45 97 05 06
Hennessy: (33) 5 45 35 72 72
Cognac Otard (Chateau de
Cognac): (33) 5 45 82 40 00
Norman Mark, who
could only say hors d'oeuvres, aurevoir and French fries before he went to
France, can now say, "Cognac." His email address is: Normanmark@aol.com
Photos courtesy of Festival du Film Policier
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