Amour met with widespread acclaim from critics. Review aggregation website
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 93% based on 223 reviews, with an average rating of 8.7/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "With towering performances and an unflinching script from Michael Haneke,
Amour represents an honest, heartwrenching depiction of deep love and responsibility."
Metacritic gives the film a weighted average rating of 95 out of 100, based on reviews from 44 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Writing for
The Guardian after the Cannes screening,
Peter Bradshaw said "this is film-making at the highest pitch of intelligence and insight", naming it the best film of 2012. Jamie Graham of
Total Film gave
Amour 5 stars out of 5, stating "far from being a cold, scientific study from a filmmaker frequently accused of placing a pane of glass between his work and his viewers, this sensitive film emerges heartfelt and humane." Dave Calhoun of
Time Out London also gave the film 5 out of 5 stars, stating "
Amour is devastatingly original and unflinching in the way it examines the effect of love on death, and vice versa". Calling
Amour the best film of 2012, critic
A. O. Scott of
The New York Times said that "months after its debut at Cannes this film already feels permanent." Writing in
The Times, critic Manohla Dargis hailed the film as "a masterpiece about life, death and everything in between." The newspaper flagged the film as a critics' pick.
The Wall Street Journal film critic
Joe Morgenstern wrote of
Amour: "Mr. Haneke's film, exquisitely photographed by Darius Khondji, has won all sorts of prizes all over the world, and no wonder; the performances alone set it off as a welcoming masterpiece." The
Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four stars out of four. In 2024,
Looper ranked it eighth on its list of the "50 Best PG-13 Movies of All Time", writing that the film "shatters your heart while reminding one of the kind of love that makes it possible to not lose all hope in the middle of life's miseries. This is one film that's as certain to impress on an emotional level as a technical one." Among the few negative reviews, Calum Marsh of the
Slant Magazine gave the film 2 out of 4 stars and indicated that the film "isn't the work of a newly moral or humanistic filmmaker, but another ruse by the same unscrupulous showman whose funny games have been beguiling us for years", adding that "Haneke's gaze, trained from an unbridgeable remove, carries no inflection of empathy; his style is too frigid, his investment too remote, for the world of these characters to open up before us, for their pain to ever feel like something more than functional."
Box office The film earned $6,739,492 in the U.S. It grossed $36,784,044 worldwide on an $8.9 million budget.
Accolades Amour received five nominations at the
85th Academy Awards:
Best Picture,
Best Actress in a Leading Role (Riva),
Best Original Screenplay (Haneke) and
Best Director (Haneke). At 85, Riva is the oldest nominee for Best Actress in a Leading Role. It won the
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. At the
25th European Film Awards,
Amour was nominated in six categories, winning in four, including Best Film and Best Director. At the
47th National Society of Film Critics Awards it won Best Film, Best Director and Best Actress. At the
66th British Academy Film Awards, it was nominated in four categories, winning for Best Leading Actress and Best Film Not in the English Language. Riva became the oldest person to win a BAFTA. At the
38th César Awards, it was nominated in ten categories, winning in five, including
Best Film,
Best Director,
Best Actor and
Best Actress. == Legacy ==