French director Eric Rohmer, a member of the French New Wave, has died. He was 89. By Duane Byrge, The Associated Press Eric Rohmer, a member of the French New Wave who directed such films as “My ...
Éric Rohmer, the french "New Wave" director behind such notable films as "Love in the Afternoon" and "My Night at Maud’s" is dead, his production house announced on Monday. He was 89. Over a career ...
The outfits featured in the late French filmmaker’s work, celebrated by a new Instagram account, offer an antidote to all that is plastic and pink. By Sarah Rosen Our critics and writers have selected ...
“I saw a Rohmer film once. It was kind of like watching paint dry,” scoffs Harry Moseby, the gruff private eye played by Gene Hackman in Arthur Penn’s classic 1975 neo-noir “Night Moves.” Indeed, it’s ...
Few directors could say as much with as little as Eric Rohmer. Consider the first emotional climax of A Summer’s Tale (1996): with just two actors, a crew of six, and a hillside trail overlooking a ...
Eric Rohmer’s “A Summer’s Tale” got lost in the shuffle 18 years ago. The witty, delicate romantic comedy about an indecisive young man and the three women in his life, written and directed by the ...
Eric Rohmer, a former film critic who became one of France’s most respected filmmakers and was internationally known for movies such as “My Night at Maud’s” and “Claire’s Knee,” died Monday in Paris.
Filmmaker Eric Rohmer died today in Paris at the age of 89, according to his production company. Though he was often associated with the French New Wave, Rohmer was older than Francois Truffaut and ...