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"At Spout, we watch a movie on Wednesday!"

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Re:Nov. 5 "The Rules of the Game" (1939)
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seely
seely
Posts 402

Nov. 5 "The Rules of the Game" (1939)



The Rules of the Game (1939)
Directed by
Jean Renoir
Now often cited as one of the greatest films ever made, Jean Renoir's La Règle du jeu/Rules of the Game was not warmly received on its original release in 1939: audiences at its opening engagements in Paris were openly hostile, responding to the film with shouts of derision, and distributors cut the movie from 113 minutes to a mere 80. It was banned as morally perilous during the German occupation and the original negative was destroyed during WWII. It wasn't until 1956 that Renoir was able to restore the film to its original length. In retrospect, this reaction seems both puzzling and understandable; at its heart, Rules of the Game is a very moral film about frequently amoral people. A comedy of manners whose wit only occasionally betrays its more serious intentions, it contrasts the romantic entanglements of rich and poor during a weekend at a country estate. André Jurieu (Roland Toutain), a French aviation hero, has fallen in love with Christine de la Chesnaye (Nora Gregor), who is married to wealthy aristocrat Marquis Robert de la Chesnaye (Marcel Dalio). Robert, however, has a mistress of his own, whom he invites to a weekend hunting party at his country home, along with André and his friend Octave (played by Jean Renoir himself). Meanwhile, the hired help have their own game of musical beds going on: a poacher is hired to work as a servant at the estate and immediately makes plans to seduce the gamekeeper's wife, while the gamekeeper recognizes him only as the man who's been trying to steal his rabbits. Among the upper classes, infidelity is not merely accepted but expected; codes are breached not by being unfaithful, but by lacking the courtesy to lie about it in public. The weekend ends in a tragedy that suggests that this way of life may soon be coming to an end. Renoir's witty, acidic screenplay makes none of the characters heroes or villains, and his graceful handling of his cast is well served by his visual style. He tells his story with long, uninterrupted takes using deep focus (cinematographer Jean Bachelet proves a worthy collaborator here), following the action with a subtle rhythm that never calls attention to itself. The sharply-cut hunting sequence makes clear that Renoir avoided more complex editing schemes by choice, believing that long takes created a more lifelike rhythm and reduced the manipulations of over-editing. Rules of the Game uses WWI as an allegory for WWII, and its representation of a vanishing way of life soon became all too true for Renoir himself, who, within a year of the film's release, was forced to leave Europe for the United States..

~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide


     
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JayMo
JayMo
Posts 3

Re:Nov. 5 "The Rules of the Game" (1939)



Who are these people?  Who make these "Best movie of all time" lists?  I reject their supposed expertise.



     

            
csprague
csprague
Posts 393

Re:Nov. 5 "The Rules of the Game" (1939)



JayMo:

Who are these people?  Who make these "Best movie of all time" lists?  I reject their supposed expertise.

Lol. I watched it in my film class. It kind of hated it too. It was sooooooooooooooo long and only mildly entertaining. 



     

            
seely
seely
Posts 402

Re:Nov. 5 "The Rules of the Game" (1939)



Ryan and I were talking about the film, and he reminded me of a good point.  Pre-1950's era films are always seemingly more drawn out and boring--a lot of that has to do with the editing, and the fact that early films were still direct descendents of theatrical productions, hence longer and slower-moving scenes between cuts.  Now, the average cut is something like 10 seconds, maximum.  Even being aware of this, I can't help but get a bit sleepy during these older films.

Also, was anyone else thinking 'Great Gatsby' during the film?

csprague:

JayMo:

Who are these people?  Who make these "Best movie of all time" lists?  I reject their supposed expertise.

Lol. I watched it in my film class. It kind of hated it too. It was sooooooooooooooo long and only mildly entertaining. 



     

            
pairadocs
pairadocs
Posts 10

Re:Nov. 5 "The Rules of the Game" (1939)



JayMo:

Who are these people?  Who make these "Best movie of all time" lists?  I reject their supposed expertise.

I concur... this was intensely awful...  definitely not my genre, and I couldn't get into it at all.  Not one stinking car chase.  ;)

 

 



     

            
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