Published: March 30, 2026. The English Chronicle Desk.
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The global wine industry is mourning the loss of Michel Rolland, the legendary Bordeaux oenologist and the world’s first truly “flying winemaker,” who passed away on March 20, 2026, at the age of 78. A towering and often polarising figure, Rolland died following a sudden heart attack at his home in Bordeaux, just weeks after returning from Argentina where he had been overseeing the 2026 vintage at his Val de Flores estate. Famously dubbed “the Spielberg of wine” by filmmaker Jonathan Nossiter in the 2004 documentary Mondovino, Rolland didn’t just consult on wine; he directed it, moving from vineyard to vineyard across five continents to craft “blockbuster” reds that defined the modern era of viticulture.
Born into a winemaking family in Pomerol in 1947, Rolland’s influence eventually stretched far beyond the Right Bank. At the height of his career, his laboratory, Laboratoire Rolland, and his personal consultancy advised over 400 estates in more than 20 countries. He was the secret architect behind some of the most expensive and sought-after labels on earth, from Napa Valley’s Harlan Estate and Screaming Eagle to Italy’s Ornellaia. His signature style—characterised by late harvesting for maximum ripeness, micro-oxygenation, and a lavish use of new oak—became the “gold standard” for the 100-point era, championed by the influential critic Robert Parker. To his admirers, he was a genius who rescued Bordeaux from “green, weedy” mediocrity; to his critics, he was a “globaliser” whose formulaic approach threatened to erase the sacred concept of terroir.
Rolland’s impact was perhaps most transformative in the “New World.” He is widely credited with puting Argentine Malbec on the map through his ambitious Clos de los Siete project in the Uco Valley, a collaborative venture that brought together several elite Bordeaux families. He saw potential in regions others ignored, from India to Armenia, arguing that “wine is my country” and that quality was a universal language. Despite the accusations of “standardisation,” Rolland remained unrepentant and jovial to the end. “I make wine to give people pleasure,” he once remarked in a Guardian interview. “If others don’t like this, well, never mind.” In his final years, many critics noted a shift in his work toward more balanced, site-specific expressions, suggesting that even the master of the “blockbuster” was finding beauty in nuance.
As the industry reflects on his 55-year career, the “Rolland Method” remains the subject of intense debate. With oil prices at $116 and the cost of glass and transport squeezing even the most prestigious châteaux, the era of the high-octane, high-cost “trophy wine” he helped create is facing new economic headwinds. Yet, his legacy is undeniable: he elevated the role of the consultant to a global superstar and democratised technical excellence. He is survived by his wife and lifelong business partner, Dany, and their daughters, Stéphanie and Marie, who continue to manage the family’s international interests. Michel Rolland didn’t just make wine; he changed the way the world tasted it, leaving behind a cellar’s worth of history that will be debated—and enjoyed—for generations to come.




























































































