“My heroes, a little like Don Quixote, take themselves for characters in a novel, but perhaps there is no novel.”—Éric Rohmer“Rohmer was one of a handful of really great filmmakers of the last half-century. I can’t think of a greater.” —Geoffrey O’Brien, The New York Review of Books“Rohmer, as critic, editor, and friend, through his writings, activities, and personal influence, was the father of the French New Wave . . . In his youth, he had little interest in movies at all, but he was a gifted student and was good at philosophy, literature, drawing, music, and theatre . . . He had already started sketching Élisabeth at age nineteen . . . Rohmer’s surfaces aren’t placid but taut; they’re smooth because of their almost unbearably high tension, and their tautness is like that of a membrane that could, with a prick, be definitively burst, giving way to an unpredictably chaotic eruption of pent-up passion.”—Richard Brody, The New Yorker“Rohmer-world [is] an enchanted and yet peculiarly unsentimental place in which both words and actions, minds and bodies, matter absolutely . . . A Rohmer movie doesn’t clobber you with its smarts; it generously furnishes you a space in which to think for yourself . . . To find other artists besides Rohmer who can see this deeply into a character’s humanity and make us love him anyway—that is to say, who can ironize with this degree of gentleness—you have to reach up to a pretty high shelf: Shakespeare? Tolstoy?”—Dana Stevens, Slate“As in so many of Rohmer’s films, his characters are young and on holiday, free to enjoy the beach or the countryside . . . It’s a world where ‘everything just devolves into flirtation.’ That the Second World War is merely a month away is the furthest thing from their thoughts . . . Rohmer is still very young . . . but these highly discerning insights into conflicting emotions and human psychology will end up appearing in all of his films . . . Rohmer’s people can be embarrassingly intimate. Yet, despite their embarrassment, they retain a touch of eloquence in their speech that leaves them highly formal and at the same time highly vulnerable. In that sense, formality does not vitiate desire; it forces it to spell itself out. It’s also how intimacy turns into art.”—André Aciman, from the Foreword“Rohmer’s novel evokes suffocating human and natural atmospheres, shifting between interiors—a cramped apartment; a dentist’s office; the inside of a car–and sun-scorched backyards and village streets. It then releases the tension in a torrential summer storm, which is made immediate in finely etched details . . . Paradoxically, his novel is a marvel of cinematic showing, a closely observed engagement with nature and ordinary life.” —Trevor Cribben Merrill, The University Bookman“The elder statesman of the Nouvelle Vague, born a decade before Truffaut and Godard, Rohmer also served as the New Wave’s sage, resisting aesthetic and political fashion to maintain his chastely ironic vision of amorous folly . . . Rohmer’s films feel miraculously fresh, contemporary, lightly sprung.) His characters search for happiness, truth, self-knowledge, but mostly they seek love, and for all the cool classicism of Rohmer’s mise-en-scène, they frequently desire an all-consuming, engulfing love, or one that ‘burns.’”—James Quandt, ArtForum“Rohmer’s world is one of eternal youth, in which illness, death, and old age never seem able to interfere.” —Jacques Kermabon, 24 images“The novel would always remain Rohmer the filmmaker’s inspiration . . . Like Godard, like Hitchcock and Fritz Lang and, one might add, like Pirandello, he is obsessed with manipulation, with machination, with conspiracies, with artifice. . . . He fills the frame with a thousand details of existence . . .” —Laurence Schifano, Rohmer en perspectives“A Rohmer movie is not simply a drama or a comedy, a love story or an exercise in suspense, a psychological study or philosophical disquisition; it’s all these and considerably more. Whether an original piece or an adaptation, be it set in the present or the past, the city or the country, it’s always first and foremost a Rohmer film. In essence, he invented his own genre.” —Geoff Andrew, The Criterion Collection