Rust Versions

La Collectionneuse Eric Rohmer | Direct & Official

Unlike the male characters’ attempts to categorize her, Haydée remains enigmatic. She is not a “collector” but a young woman living freely. She never articulates a grand philosophy; she sleeps with whom she pleases, often out of boredom or affection. Rohmer refuses to judge her. Her famous final line — “Why didn’t you just go to bed with me? It would have been simpler” — exposes the absurdity of Adrien’s elaborate intellectual construct.

The film takes place over a summer in a villa near Saint-Tropez. Adrien (Patrick Bauchau), a young art dealer, intends to spend a quiet holiday focused on meditation and avoiding romantic entanglements. He shares the house with the impulsive Daniel (Daniel Pommereulle), an artist, and a young woman named Haydée (Haydée Politoff), whom Daniel labels “la collectionneuse” — implying she “collects” men as transient lovers. Adrien positions himself as morally superior to both Daniel’s crudeness and Haydée’s perceived promiscuity. However, he becomes obsessed with Haydée, constantly analyzing her behavior while refusing to sleep with her, believing that to do so would make him just another item in her collection. The film ends with Adrien fleeing back to Paris after a brief, unfulfilling encounter, claiming his “victory” is having resisted her. la collectionneuse eric rohmer

The Paradox of Possession: Aesthetic Detachment and Moral Ambiguity in Éric Rohmer’s La Collectionneuse Unlike the male characters’ attempts to categorize her,

Released in 1967, La Collectionneuse (The Collector) is the fourth film in Éric Rohmer’s Six Moral Tales ( Contes moraux ) series. Preceded by La Boulangère de Monceau (1963), La Carrière de Suzanne (1963), and La Collectionneuse , and followed by Ma Nuit chez Maud (1969), Le Genou de Claire (1970), and L’Amour l’après-midi (1972), the film marks Rohmer’s first feature-length success and establishes his signature style: minimal action, extensive dialogue, and a focus on the internal rationalizations of a male protagonist. This paper argues that La Collectionneuse critiques the male intellectual’s fear of female sexual agency by exposing his pseudo-philosophical detachment as a form of moral cowardice. Rohmer refuses to judge her