The Rules of the Game
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- For other uses, see The Rules of the Game (disambiguation).
The Rules of the Game | |
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original movie poster |
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Directed by | Jean Renoir |
Written by | Jean Renoir Carl Koch |
Starring | Nora Gregor Paulette Dubost Marcel Dalio Jean Renoir Julien Carette |
Music by | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (opening) Pierre-Alexandre Monsigny Roger Désormières (arranger) |
Cinematography | Jean-Paul Alphen Jean Bachelet |
Editing by | Marthe Huguet Marguerite Renoir |
Distributed by | Janus Films (US) |
Release date(s) | 8 July 1939 |
Running time | 110 min |
Language | French |
Budget | FRF 5,500,500 |
IMDb profile |
The Rules of the Game (original French title: La règle du jeu) is a 1939 comedy-drama film directed by Jean Renoir about upper-class French society just before the start of World War II. Renoir's film is in part an adaptation of Alfred de Musset's Les Caprices de Marianne, a popular 19th-century comedy of manners, and is widely regarded to be Renoir's greatest film.
The film is an ensemble farce that turns into a tragedy in the final act. It is characterized by thematic elements common to much of Renoir's work, such as the moral relativism exhibited by its characters and an abhorrence of senseless death.
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[edit] Synopsis
The film begins with the aviator André Jurieux landing after making a record-breaking trans-Atlantic flight. His heroism is ever-diminished by the sequential presentation of his failings, beginning with his being upset that his ladylove is not there to meet him. He is one of those who do not play by the rules of the game. Another is Robert de la Chesnaye, a Jewish aristocrat, at whose estate (La Colinière) most of the film takes place; the third is Schumacher, the gamekeeper of the grounds.
Jurieu lands at Le Bourget Airfield just outside Paris, France. He's greeted by his friend, Octave, who reveals that Christine, the woman Andre loves, has not come to the airfield to greet him. Andre is heartbroken. When a radio reporter comes to broadcast his first words upon landing, he explains his sorrow and denounces the woman who has spurned him.
Christine, an Austrian, is listening to the broadcast from her apartments in Paris as she is attended by her maid, Lisette. Christine has been married to Robert de la Chesnaye for three years. Lisette has been married to Schumacher, the gamekeeper at the country estate, for two years, but she is more devoted to Madame Christine. Christine's past relationship with Andre is openly known by her husband, her maid, and their friend Octave. After Christine and Robert playfully discuss Andre's emotional display and pledge devotion to one another, Robert excuses himself to make a phone call. He arranges to meet Genevieve, his mistress, the next morning.
At Genevieve's apartment, Robert announces he must end their relationship, but invites her to join them for a weekend retreat to Robert & Christine's country estate, La Coliniere.
Driving with Octave, Andre is so distraught that he gets into an accident. Octave tells him he must compose himself; that he cannot remain so emotional. After all, he is a national hero. Later, Octave induces Robert to invite Andre to the country as well. Perhaps, they joke, Andre and Genevieve will pair off and solve everyone's problems. Lisette's husband, Schumacher, has written to ask if Lisette can move to La Colinière, but Lisette seems unenthusiastic.
At the estate, Schumacher is policing the grounds, trying to get rid of rabbits. La Chesnaye wants the rabbits removed but refuses to let Schumacher install fences to keep them out. Marceau, a poacher, sneaks onto the grounds to retrieve a rabbit caught from one of his snares. Before he can get away, Schumacher catches him and begins to march him off the property when Robert demands to know what is going on. Marceau explains that he can catch rabbits and Robert offers him a job. Schumacher is outraged but Robert orders him back to his duties. As Marceau and la Chesnaye talk, Marceau explains he'd rather work in the house than the fields. He's always dreamed of wearing a uniform and he would just as soon stay away from Schumacher, who plainly detests him.
It is of course the relationships that these men have with the women at the estate that make the story, which ends with a murder disguised as a hunting accident.
[edit] Reception
The film was initially condemned for its satire on the French upper classes and was greeted with derision by a Parisian crowd on its première. The upper class is depicted in this film as capricious and self-indulgent, with little regard for the consequences of their actions. The French government duly banned it, but after the War it has come to be seen by many film critics and directors as one of the greatest films of all time.
[edit] Style
The Rules of the Game is noted for its use of deep focus so that events going on in the background are as important as those in the foreground.
In a 1954 interview with Jacques Rivette and François Truffaut, reprinted in Jean Renoir: Interviews, Renoir said "Working on the script inspired me to make a break and perhaps get away from naturalism completely, to try to touch on a more classical, more poetic genre." He admitted that he wrote and rewrote it several times, often abandoning his original intentions altogether upon interaction with the actors having witnessed reactions that he hadn't foreseen. As a director he sought to "get closer to the way in which characters can adapt to their theories in real life while being subjected to life’s many obstacles that keep us from being theoretical and from remaining theoretical". [citation needed]
The film has been a favorite with other filmmakers. One example is Robert Altman's Gosford Park which copied many of is plot elements (a story of aristocrats in the country, aristocrats and their servants, murder) and pays homage with a direct reference to the infamous hunting scene.