Éric Rohmer (born April 4, 1920?, Tulle?, France—died January 11, 2010, Paris) was a French motion-picture director and writer who was noted for his sensitively observed studies of romantic passion.
Rohmer was an intensely private man who provided conflicting information about his early life. He offered different given names and gave several dates of birth, including March 21, 1920, and April 4, 1920. In addition, he variously claimed Nancy and Tulle as his birthplace.
Rohmer, who earned an advanced degree in history and taught school for a short time, began his writing career in the mid-1940s. After moving to Paris, he started to write film criticism for French periodicals. He was a founding editor of La Gazette du cinéma in 1950, along with François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, and Jacques Rivette, and he became editor in chief of the New Wave publication Cahiers du cinéma in 1957. That year he and Claude Chabrol authored the film study Hitchcock. In 1963 he quit Cahiers after becoming involved in a dispute.
In 1950 Rohmer began making a series of short, fairly successful films. In 1959 he directed his first full-length feature, Le Signe du lion (“The Sign of Leo”). Rohmer next directed a series of six contes moraux, or moral tales, beginning with La Boulangère de Monceau (1963; The Bakery Girl of Monceau) and La Carrière de Suzanne (1963; Suzanne’s Career). Both films were commercial failures, and Rohmer turned his attention to directing television documentaries. Then in 1966 he filmed another of the moral tales, La Collectionneuse (“The Collector”), which achieved some critical esteem in Europe.
It was not until Rohmer filmed Ma Nuit chez Maud (1969; My Night at Maud’s) that he scored a commercial hit. Considered by most critics to be the centrepiece of the contes moraux, My Night at Maud’s is the story of a puritanical engineer marooned in a snowstorm who takes refuge in the apartment of an attractive divorcée. She tries to seduce him, but he resists her efforts, and the two spend the night discussing intellectual matters. Acclaimed by critics and popular with audiences in both France and the United States, the film earned an Academy Award nomination as best foreign-language film and one for Rohmer for best original screenplay. Rohmer’s next effort, Le Genou de Claire (1970; Claire’s Knee), was named best film at the San Sebastián International Film Festival and received two awards as the year’s best French film—the Prix Louis-Delluc and the Prix Méliès. Rohmer completed the series in 1972 with the release of L’Amour l’après-midi (Chloe in the Afternoon), and the scripts were later published as Six Moral Tales (1977).
Based on a short story by Heinrich von Kleist, Rohmer’s Die Marquise von O (1976; The Marquise of O) won the special Jury Prize at the Cannes film festival. Perceval le Gallois (1978; Perceval), adapted from an Arthurian romance by Chrétien de Troyes, was less well received. He then embarked on another multifilm series, Comedies et proverbes (“Comedies and Proverbs”), begun in 1981 with La Femme de l’aviateur (The Aviator’s Wife) and including Pauline à la plage (1983; Pauline at the Beach) and Le Rayon vert (1986; Summer), which took the top award at the Venice Film Festival. Rohmer’s final series was the Contes des quatre saisons (1990–98; “Tales of the Four Seasons”). At the beginning of the 21st century, he directed such films as L’Anglaise et le duc (2001; The Lady and the Duke), Triple Agent (2004), and Les Amours d’Astrée et de Céladon (2007; Romance of Astrea and Celadon); the latter was his last movie.