David Sterritt of Guiltless Pleasures and Chairman of the National Society of Film Critics
Few serious thinkers about cinema have been untouched by Robin Wood's singular insights. These strikingly varied, richly rewarding essays demonstrate the ongoing importance of his deeply felt yet rigorously argued views, reaffirming and revitalizing his commitment to film criticism as an exacting, eclectic, and ultimately indispensable art."
R. Selden Rose Professor of Film and Comparative Literature at Yale University - Dudley Andrew
Robin Wood's Personal Views reminds us that experience is never out of date. His essays-erudite, mature, and carefully styled-strike me again today with the freshness and the depth of the films that so took hold of him. I'm grateful for what he has felt and for such candid reflection on those feelings."
Professor of Motion Pictures and Director of the Graduate Program in Film Studies at the University of Miami and Author - Wiliam Rothman
Personal Views reminds us on every page that Robin Wood has always been, as he still is, a great film critic who unfailingly connects films and ideas in unexpected and provocative ways. These essays exemplify the value of thinking critically about movies, the ways we experience them, and their impact on society and culture."
Bruce Kawin of Mindscreen and the Mind of the Novel and Professor of English and Film at the Univers
Concerned mostly with film, but also with literature, music, and pedagogy, this long-lost book of humanistic criticism integrates aesthetics, morals, and politics in a set of precise, resonant analyses of Welles, Hawks, Mizoguchi, Tolstoy, and others, while vividly challenging the hegemony of theory."