Biography: life and films
It is a curious thing that for a filmmaker who is held in such high
regard the reputation of Jean Renoir appears to rest on only a handful
of the forty or so films that he made. The films that Renoir
directed after WWII, along with much of his early work, tend to be
overlooked, whilst most critical attention is focused on the two films
for which he is best known,
La
Grande Illusion and
La
Règle du jeu.
To confine one's attention to
Renoir's supposedly 'greatest films' is to do a great disservice to the
man and his art, for Jean Renoir was one of the true mavericks of
cinema, his work encompassing a phenomenal range of subjects and
styles. His penchant for experimentation, his contempt for
cliché and his free-spirited nature bring an anarchy, vitality
and diversity to his cinema which is virtually unrivalled. Renoir's
greatness as a director has less to do with his technical competence as
a metteur-en-scène and far more to do with his auteur
temperament and his profound love of humanity. Like his father,
Auguste, Renoir was consumed with a passion for the transient beauty of
life, and his art can be summed up as an attempt to capture this beauty
within a frame and preserve it for ever.
Jean Renoir was born in Paris on 15th September 1894. He was the
second son of the impressionist French painter Auguste Renoir, who was
then 53. His mother was Aline Charigot, one of Auguste's models
before he married her in 1890. Jean had two brothers: Pierre, 9
years older, who became an actor, and Claude, 7 years younger,
who became a film producer. Pierre Renoir's son Claude, born in
1913, made his name as a cinematographer. Jean Renoir spent the
first five years of his life with his family living in one of the
pavillons of the Château des Brouillards near the Butte
Montmartre. As a little boy, he was one of his father's favourite
models, his lustrous long orange hair burning like a wild fire in his
father's paintings of him.
Jean attended Collège Saint-Croix at Neuilly - he was a poor
student and often played truant. After his family moved to the
south of France, he attended the lycée at Nice and obtained his
baccalauréat with distinction in 1910. At an early age, he
made up his mind that he would not follow in his father's footsteps and
become an artist, deciding instead that he would rather be a
businessman. As an adolescent, he grew to like horses and
enlisted as a non-commissioned cavalry officer in 1913. At the
start of WWI, he was a sergeant-in-arms in the first regiment of the
dragoons stationed at Vincennes. A kick from a horse left
him badly injured and, in early 1915, he was sent to the front, now a
sub-lieutenant in the light infantry. Not long afterwards, his
femur was fractured by a bullet when he was out on patrol.
Gangrene set in and he just escaped having his leg amputated. His
wound healed but he was left with a limp for the rest of his
life. During his period of convalescence Renoir became addicted
to cinema and boasted that he made a habit of watching at least 25
films a week, "all American, of course". At this stage, it had
not occurred to him that he might want to become a film director.
He returned to the front early in 1916, to work as a photographer on
reconnaissance missions in the flying corps. He survived a crash
landing with further injuries.
On his return to civilian life after the war, Renoir had no clear plans
for his future and began working as a ceramicist. In 1920, a few
weeks after the death of his father, Renoir married Andrée
Heuschling, one of his father's late models. She bore his
son Alain in 1921, who became a professor of literature at the
University of California in Berkeley. Jean was now busy running a
ceramics workshop in the Midi, and his work was highly valued. He
could have made this his career if he had chosen, but after four years
he decided to give it up and have a go at making films. One of
his motivations for doing so was to make his wife a star of the silver
screen, to preserve her unique beauty as his father had previously done
through his painting.
It was through his brother Pierre, now an established actor of the
Parisian stage, that Jean Renoir met Alberto Cavalcanti, soon to become
an avant-garde filmmaker, and Albert Dieudonné, an actor who had
already appeared in several films (today, he is best known for playing
in Napoléon in Abel Gance's famous
1927
biopic). Having directed a couple of minor films,
Dieudonné had ambitions of becoming a serious film director and
persuaded Renoir to produce his next film
Une
vie sans joie (1924) in return for allowing Heuschling to
take the female lead role. Renoir supplied the script, a fanciful
melodrama in which his class consciousness is already apparent, and
Dieudonné directed with (or so he insisted) no directorial input
from Renoir. For her screen debut, Heuschling was credited under
the name by which she is now best known, Catherine Hessling.
Renoir also made his first screen appearance in this film, in a minor
role.
Une vie sans joie was
not a commercial success, even when it was re-released in 1927 under a
new title,
Catherine.
This failure quashed Dieudonné's hopes of becoming a filmmaker
but did not dampen Renoir's enthusiasm. After seeing Erich von
Stroheim's
Foolish Wives (1922), he was
more determined than ever to become a film director.
Just before watching von Stroheim's film, Renoir made his directing
debut with
La Fille de l'eau (1924),
financing it himself with his own personal fortune. This again
featured his wife Catherine Hessling in the central role, but was
scripted by Pierre Lestringuez, who collaborated with him on his next
three films. A rural fable filmed on an estate belonging to the
painter Cézanne, this film employs a strange juxtaposition of
realistic cinematography and dreamlike optical effects (multiple
exposure, handheld tracking shots, etc.), the latter of which
suggest an over-zealous attempt by Renoir to associate himself with the
avant-garde 'impressionists' of the day, Jean Epstein, Abel Gance and
Germaine Dulac. It's an eerily poetic film but one that, like
many of Renoir's early films, lacks artistic cohesion. One thing
to note is Renoir's use of running water as a reassuring metaphor for
the continuity of life - this is a motif that recurs in several of his
subsequent films.
When they met, Jean Renoir and Pierre Braunberger, then director of
publicity for Paramount Pictures France, hit it off immediately.
Renoir allowed Braunberger to talk him in to taking over the running of
his film production company, Les Films Jean Renoir, and within no time
they were embarking on a lavish, big budget period adaptation of
Émile Zola's novel
Nana. A large chunk of
the million franc budget was supplied by Renoir himself from the sale
of several paintings he had inherited from his father. Filmed
over a five month period in Gaumont Studios in Paris and Grunewald
Studios in Berlin, the film again had Hessling in the lead role,
looking more sensual than ever as the eponymous 19th century
courtesan. Whilst the film received positive reviews in Germany,
it proved to be a resounding commercial failure. After the
pressures entailed by this mammoth enterprise, Renoir was badly in need
of therapy, which he found by knocking out a surreal, erotic fantasy,
Sur un air de Charleston
(1927), in just three days. Oddly likeable though the film is, it
failed to find an audience and Renoir's production company was wound up
shortly afterwards.
With Renoir's filmmaking aspirations about to bite the dust it was his
brother Pierre who came to his rescue, inviting him to direct a film
that was to showcase his second wife Marie-Louise Iribe.
Marquitta
(1927) was the first film to be produced by Les Artistes Réunis,
the company that Pierre Renoir and Iribe had recently founded with the
express purpose of making the latter a major star of cinema.
Despite the presence of Jean Angelo as the male lead, the film ended up
a fairly lacklustre melodrama and Les Artistes Réunis ceased its
operations the following year.
The one good thing to come out of
Marquitta
was that it earned its director an invitation from Jean Tedesco to make
an art film for the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier, which
screened exclusively avant-garde films. Renoir was given a free
hand and the film he made for Tedesco -
La Petite Marchande d'allumettes
(1928), after the children's story by Hans Christian Andersen, is one
of his most wildly experimental, an odd conflation of film noir and
fairytale that is quite unlike any other film he made. A lawsuit
filed against the film's producers by Maurice Rostand, the author of an
adaptation of the same story for the Opéra-Comique, resulted in
the film prints being impounded. By the time the film was
released two years later, sound cinema had come along and relegated
silent curios such as this to the scrap heap. Artistically, the
film was a small triumph, but it was yet another commercial misfire.
This latest in a string of failures led Renoir to accept two
commissions from the Société des Grands Films
Historiques. The first was
Le Tournoi dans la cité
(1929), a historical piece set at the time of Catherine de' Medici
which is distinguished more by its bold, almost Dreyer-like composition
than its performances.
Le Bled (1929) was
commissioned, with funding from the French government, to mark the
centenary of France's pacification of Algeria. An unashamed
celebration of colonialism, the film is an effective fusion of
documentary and melodrama but was only a moderate success.
Between these two commissions, Renoir clubbed together with a number of
friends to make his first feature comedy,
Tire-au-flanc,
a farce on military life based on a popular stage play of the
time. The first of Renoir's films to turn a decent profit, it was
also marked the beginning of the director's association with Michel
Simon, who later featured in two of his most important films of the
1930s.
Just as sound cinema was beginning to make its triumphant entry. it
looked as if Jean Renoir's career as a film director was grinding to a
halt. Having failed as an independent auteur, Renoir had been no
more successful as a commissioned filmmaker. He was by now
finding his feet as an actor, lending his talents in this vein to some
films directed by his friend Alberto Cavalcanti -
La P'tite Lili (1927) and
Le Petit chaperon rouge
(1930). It was on the former of these films that Renoir worked
with the three women of his life - his then wife Catherine Hessling,
his subsequent partner Marguerite Houllé, who edited all of his
films from 1931 to 1939 under the name Marguerite Renoir (even though
they never married) and Dido Freire, later to become Renoir's second
wife.
It was at this point that Renoir was offered a lifeline by his old friend Pierre Braunberger, who had
recently formed a new film production company, Les
Établissements Braunberger-Richebé, with Roger
Richebé. Before embarking on the film that Renoir had
intended to make with Michel Simon,
La
Chienne, he was saddled with the less honourable task of
adapting Feydeau's fairly unedifying farce
On
purge bébé. Whilst it is far from being
Renoir's greatest film, the presence of two
monstres sacrés of French
cinema - Michel Simon and Fernandel - makes up for the silliness of its
premise, and it served its function in giving Renoir the opportunity to
come to grips with the new but hopelessly restricting phenomenon of
synchronised sound recording.
Renoir's second film for Braunberger-Richebé was of an
altogether different order, his first film of any real
importance. Shot extensively on location and with a strong
emphasis on psychological depth,
La Chienne (1930) contains
within it the origins of film noir, poetic realism and
neo-realism. Despite some harsh reviews from some critics who
regarded it as vulgar,
La Chienne
was a commercial success and it is possibly the most influential
European film of the first decade of the sound era. It marked the
beginning of a dramatic renaissance in French cinema, in which Renoir
would play an important role. After his separation from Catherine
Hessling, Renoir was obliged to look around for a new leading lady and
struck lucky with the 23 year old Janie Marèse. Filming on
La Chienne had barely been
completed when Marèse was killed in a road accident.
Renoir blamed his star's death on Michel Simon, leading to a brief
estrangement between the two men.
Renoir's claim to be the 'father of film noir' is stronger in the next
film he made,
La Nuit du carrefour
(1932). Notably, this was cinema's first adaptation of a Georges
Simenon novel, and the first screen outing for Jules Maigret, here
played here by the director's brother, Pierre Renoir. With its
muddled, barely fathomable plot and eerily oppressive atmosphere,
showing the influence of German expressionism strongly in some scenes,
La Nuit du carrefour is film noir
in essence and in substance and doubtless had a large part to play in
the development and popularisation of one of cinema's most distinctive
aesthetics. It is also one of Renoir's most hauntingly beautiful
films.
The films that Jean Renoir made in the first half of the 1930s betray
an increasing antipathy towards the bourgeoisie which would later
develop, under the influence of his partner Marguerite Houllé,
into a genuine concern for the plight of the working class.
Adapted from a play by René Fauchois,
Boudu sauvé des eaux
(1932) is a critique of bourgeois attitudes in a similar vein to the
director's later
La Règle du
jeu, but its mockery and condemnation are dealt with in a far
more playful and forgiving manner. Renoir was commissioned to
direct the film by two of its actors, Jean Gehret and Michel Simon, the
latter happily reprising the role he had played so successfully on
stage seven year previously. So favourable was the criticism that
Renoir and Simon considered teaming up to make a series of films
featuring the loveable rogue Boudu, but Boudu's first screen adventure
was less commercially successful than they had hope and the plan was
abandoned.
More light-hearted bourgeois mockery is served up in
Chotard
et Cie (1932). Commissioned by the playwright Roger
Ferdinand, it's a piece of frivolity that fails to disguise its low
budget but Renoir's penchant for comedy prevents it from ending up as a
grim pastiche of a Marcel Pagnol film. This commission was
followed by another, from Nouvelle Société des Films, to
adapt Gustave Flaubert's
Madame Bovary. Renoir's
attempts to evoke the suffocating mundanity of the heroine's life
resulted in a film that is itself stiflingly mundane, although it
captures the essence of Flaubert's novel better than perhaps any
subsequent screen adaptation. The film was not a success.
Marcel Pagnol was easily persuaded by Renoir to produce his next film,
shot entirely on location with a mostly non-professional cast of
actors. The style of film that Renoir envisaged tallied well with
Pagnol's own conception of cinema, with the exception that Renoir
intended going further in developing a style that would bring us nearer
to the truth of human experience. In the raw, almost brutal
naturalism of
Toni (1935) Renoir delivered a
template for Italian neo-realism, and his assistant, Luchino Visconti,
brought what he had learned on this film to his early work as a
director,
Ossessione (1943) and
La
Terra Trema (1948). Lacking the gentle sentimentality
and humour of Pagnol's own films,
Toni
was ill-received by both critics and audiences.
It is in
Toni that Renoir's
honest engagement with the proletariat first becomes apparent.
His involvement with leftwing politics was in sympathy with the
political changes that were happening in France in the mid-1930s,
culminating with the Front Populaire government, a coalition of
leftwing political parties, in 1936. These changes were driven
partly by economic factors - the Great Depression was still
taking its toll - but also by external political factors, most notably
the rise of Fascism across mainland Europe. In
Le Crime de monsieur Lange
(1936), Renoir throws his lot in with the Front Populaire and seems to
anticipate a proletariat uprising in which capitalism will give way to
a communist form of collectivism, with the workers owning the means of
production. Renoir's most overtly political film, it is let down
by its simplistic handling of some complex themes. Capitalism is
personified as a treacherous fiend played with a pantomimic fervour by
Jules Berry, the actor who made self-interested, toe-curling venality
his art. The film struck a chord at the time but it was not a
great success.
Although he was not himself a communist, Renoir was a willing
participant on the propaganda documentary
La Vie est à nous (1936),
which was commissioned by the French Communist Party. Ironically,
the filmed ended up being banned by the Front Populaire government in
reaction to a wave of strikes organised by the Communist Party.
Whilst the film now appears naive in the extreme, resorting to specious
didacticism instead of compassionate reasoning to sell the perceived
virtues of communism, it provides an interesting insight of the time in
which it was made. Renoir later distanced himself from the film.
Partie de campagne (1936),
based on the short story by Guy de Maupassant, was a film that, owing
to continuing bouts of torrential rain, Renoir was unable to
complete. A bittersweet romance filmed mostly on location on the
banks of the Loing and Essonne just outside Paris, the film evokes the
impressionistic paintings of the director's father and looks like a
departure from his politically involved films of this era. The
anti-bourgeois sentiment is there if you care to look for it, most
visibly in the caricatured shopkeeper Monsieur Dufour. After the
war, its producer Pierre Braunberger was keen to exploit the film
commercially, but with Renoir having lost interest in it the job of
piecing it together was undertaken by his former editor, Marguerite
Houllé. Despite its status as an unfinished work,
Partie de campagne is a coherent
and satisfying piece of film art, one of Renoir's most beguiling works.
For his adaptation of Maxim Gorky's
The
Lower Depths, Renoir returns to the neo-realist style of
Toni, this time drenching it with
the naive optimism that was endemic among supporters of the Front
Populaire at the time.
Les Bas-fonds (1936) is a film
that lacks artistic coherence and is marred by an unconvincing merging
of French and Russian culture, but compelling performances from Jean
Gabin (in the first of four films by Renoir) and Louis Jouvet amply
redeem it. Catching the Zeitgeist, the film was a critical
and commercial success, earning the first Prix Louis-Delluc in
1937. It also resulted in Renoir being made a Knight of the
Legion of Honour.
In
La Grande Illusion (1937),
Renoir deals most effectively with a theme that runs through most of
the films he made in the latter half of the 1930s, namely an appeal for
unity across all creeds and classes at a time of national crisis.
Today, it is regarded as an anti-war film, although this is likely to
have been secondary to Renoir's original intention, the 'illusion' in
the film's title most likely alluding to the phoney barriers that
separate one man from another. This ties up neatly with Renoir's
next film,
La Marseillaise (1938), in
which the ideals of the French Revolution become a rallying cry for
unity across France in the face of the escalating threat on its
borders. Whereas
La Grande
illusion struck a chord and was a hit in just about every
country where it was released (including, paradoxically, Nazi Germany),
La Marseillaise was a
spectacular failure.
The optimism of the Front Populaire era had completely evaporated by
the time Renoir came to direct
La Bête humaine (1938),
so it is little wonder that this is his bleakest film. The mood of
the film - fatalistic, despairing, unrelentingly grim - reflects how
most people in France felt as a pall of pessimism descended on the
country in the months preceding the outbreak of the Second World
War. The memorable opening sequence, a train surging forwards,
was an apt metaphor for a country being propelled towards the abyss by
unstoppable forces in the late 1930s. As in the poetic realist
films of Marcel Carné and Julien Duvivier,
La Bête humaine is steeped in
gloom and presages disaster in almost every frame.
The success of
La Bête humaine
allowed Jean Renoir the chance to finally satisfy his long-held
hankering after producing his own films.
La
Règle du jeu (1939) was the first film to be made by
the cooperative which he had set up with his brother Claude Renoir,
André Zwoboda, Camille François and Olivier
Billioux. What started out as an adaptation of Alfred de Musset's
1833 play
Les Caprices de Marianne
ended up as a scathing modern critique of France's class system, in
which the hypocrisy underpinning a flawed social structure is seen to
wreak havoc on those who dare to defy 'the rules of the game'. It
ought to be the bleakest of Renoir's films but comedy intrudes so often
and so unexpectedly that the film's abject cynicism is attenuated to
the point that it is scarcely noticed on a first viewing.
Technically and artistically,
La
Règle du jeu is Renoir's most perfect film, having a
coherence and unity that is pretty well lacking in every other film he
made. Alas, this is not something that was apparent to audiences
that saw the film when it was first released in July 1939. An
initial flop, Renoir was obliged to re-edit the film to reduce its
runtime by half an hour, to no avail. The critics hated the film
and the public shunned it. It wasn't until the late 1950s that
it resurfaced and acquired the reputation it now holds, as one of the
greatest of all films.
After the start of WWII, Renoir found himself in Italy to direct Michel
Simon in
La Tosca, based on
the play by Victorien Sardou. Renoir had shot only a few scenes
before he took the advice of the French Embassy and fled the country in
May 1940. The film was completed by Carl Koch, with assistance
from Luchino Visconto. Having obtained a visa to work in the
United States, Renoir left France in October 1940, in the company of
his new partner Dido Freire. After signing a contract with 20th
Century Fox, he began his career in Hollywood by directing Anne Baxter
and Walter Brennan in
Swamp Water
(1941), a film noir that looks like a neo-realist's interpretation of a
classic western. Influenced by Jean Ford and trying perhaps a
little too hard to please his American audience, Renoir seems reluctant
to endow the film with his personal tropes, so it is a fairly anonymous
piece, like a painting to which its artist is unable to add his
signature. If the film has a voice at all, it is that of its
screenwriter, Dudley Nichols. The film was only a moderate
success, and Fox and Renoir parted company on amicable terms.
After their fairly successful first collaboration, Renoir and Nichols
joined up to form their own production company, backed by RKO, for
their next film,
This Land Is Mine (1943).
From the outset, this was conceived as a propaganda piece to alert the
population of the United States to the threat of Fascism and thereby
galvanise support for the war in Europe. Despite its obvious
budgetary limitations and a melodramatic script that strains
credibility in a few scenes, the film argues its case well and closes
with a highly moving denouement, helped by a strong performance from
Charles Laughton. The American government then commissioned
Renoir to make another propaganda film, this time a short entitled
Salute to France.
Of the six films that Jean Renoir made during his stay in Hollywood,
the one that is closest in essence to American cinema is
The
Southerner (1945), a realist account of a family's struggle
to survive against the odds that makes John Ford's
The Grapes of Wrath (1940) look
positively upbeat. It was for this film that Renoir received his
one and only Oscar nomination, and it won the Best Film award at the
Venice Film Festival in 1946. By now Renoir had acquired his
American citizenship and had come to regard the 'Land of the Free' as
his own.
Despite being at home in America, Renoir had difficulty adapting to the
American way of making films. He had already walked away from one
film,
The Amazing Mrs. Holliday
(1943), for which he received no on-screen credit even though he shot
two thirds of the film (according to its lead actress Deanna Durbin)
and his last Hollywood film,
The
Woman on the Beach (1947), a film noir starring Robert Ryan and
Joan Bennett, would be ruined in the edit and ended up a flop.
The Diary of a Chambermaid
(1946) also struggled to turn a profit on its first release and seems
an unlikely sell for an American audience, being a belated return to
the anti-bourgeois satire of Renoir's first French period, combining
elements of both
Boudu and
La Règle du jeu.
Although set in the early 1900s, the film makes a sly but effective
critique of American society of the mid-1940s, the class hierarchy
being every bit as rigid and preposterous as that of 1930s
France.
The experience of making
The Woman
on the Beach was so painful that once the film was completed
Renoir decided his Hollywood career was over. Rumer Godden's
novel
The River reawakened
his interest in filmmaking and four years after his last American film
was in the can Renoir was on his way to India, to direct his first
colour film. In fact it was the first Technicolor film to have
been made in India and it would have a lasting influence on Indian
cinema, inspiring, notably, Satyajit Ray. Beautifully
photographed by the director's nephew Claude Renoir,
The
River is the most cinematic of Renoir's films, a film that
sizzles with a spiritual fervour in its panoramic shots of a stunning
location. The film was a worldwide success and received the first
International Prize at 1951 Venice Film Festival.
Whether he was a citizen of the world or a rootless artist in search of
inspiration, Renoir then ended up in Rome, directing neo-realist diva
Anna Magnani in
Le Carrosse d'or (1953), his
first European film in 13 years. A Franco-Italian production,
three slightly different versions of the film were made, with Italian,
French and English language soundtracks. Switching between
theatre and real life, the film blurs the distinction between the two
and takes on an intermediate form in which art and life become
indistinguishable - a quality that impinges, more subtly, in each of
Renoir's subsequent films and is the main theme of
Orvet, the stage play he wrote
immediately before
French Cancan.
Expectations had been raised impossibly high after the director's
previous film, and so
Le Carrosse
d'or met with a distinctly lukewarm reception.
The colour and vitality of Paris in the Belle Époque are evoked
with a blazing intensity in Renoir's next film,
French
Cancan, a shameless nostalgia piece that revels in its
garish whimsy. Originally intended for Yves Allégret, it
was the first film that Renoir made in France since
La Règle du jeu and its
success augured well for the second phase of his career in his country
of origin. Away from the surface gloss and energetic interludes
(the highpoint of which being the titular set-piece performed by
high-kicking dancers at the Moulin Rouge) the film offers a profound
meditation on the relationship between art and life, concluding that
art is not just a part of life but it's logical and necessary
fulfilment.
Renoir's longstanding ambition to make a film with Ingrid Bergman was
finally realised with
Elena et les Hommes (1956),
another period drama set in Belle Époque Paris.
Similarities with Renoir's earlier
La
Règle du jeu abound, but here the critique is blunter,
the characters more like puppets searching for an identity than real
people. Renoir's commitment to make an English language version
of the film in parallel with the French version resulted in unnecessary
production difficulties which doubtless contributed to the film's
failure at the box office.
It is ironic that just as he was beginning to be regarded as one of the
most important film directors of the 20th century, thanks in part to a
reappraisal of his work by the staff of the Cahiers du cinéma,
Jean Renoir was starting to find it virtually impossible to persuade
anyone to produce the films he wanted to make. He had resisted
several invitations from French television to direct plays for the
small screen but in 1959 he made what he believed would be a
revolutionary proposal - to make a film using the techniques of
television which could be successfully screened in cinemas. Since
the cost of a television production was substantially less than that of
a comparable conventional film, Renoir envisaged a means by which films
could be made far more cheaply, by shooting them in a television studio
using the multi-camera system of recording.
Le Testament du docteur Cordelier
(1959) was filmed in the Paris studios of
Radio-Télévision Française with a crew consisting
of television and film technicians. As was the practice at the
time, the actors spent several days rehearsing the film before it was
shot in the studio, with typically five cameras recording
simultaneously. The approach achieved a continuity of action that
was rare in cinema, but the downside was that imperfections in the
acting and recording were more visible on the screen. It was a
failed experiment. Critics of the film when it premiered at the
1959 Venice Film Festival were not kind to it, and the French film
industry, fearful of the competition posed by television, threatened a
massive boycott if it was ever released. It wasn't until May 1961
that the public were allowed to see the film in cinemas, as Renoir
intended.
The failure of
Le Testament du
docteur Cordelier notwithstanding, the idea of filming with
multiple cameras still appealed to Renoir and he employed this
technique on his next film,
Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe
(1959). As its title implies (a reference to the famous painting
by Manet), the film is Renoir's homage to the impressionistic style of
his father, and, filmed in warm colours, mostly in richly verdant
exteriors, it has all the vibrancy and vitality of a painting by
Auguste Renoir. A cautionary tale on where scientific endeavour
may be leading humanity, away from a sun-dappled Eden towards some
spiritually barren, utilitarian idea of Utopia, the film probably has a
much greater resonance today than it did when it was made.
For his final film for the cinema,
Le Caporal épinglé
(1962), Renoir takes several backward steps, ditching multi-camera
recording and going back to black and white. The film looks like
an updated comic remake of
La Grande
illusion, the three main characters of that earlier film having
their modern equivalent. Good-natured entertain though it is,
there's not much of the great cineaste to be found in this cinematic
swansong. It would be almost a decade before Renoir bowed out for
good with his final film, made for French television:
Le Petit Théâtre de Jean
Renoir (1971). A likeable collection of three short
films linked by a musical number (supplied by a ravishing Jeanne
Moreau), this feels like a compendium of Renoir's 'best bits',
including a social critique disguised as a fairytale, a bizarre black
comedy and a rural fable with a cogent moral.
With his filmmaking career all but over by the early 1960s, Renoir
redirected his artistic energies to writing. In addition to his
biography of his father,
Renoir, mon
père (1962) and his autobiography,
Ma vie et mes films (1974), he also
published a number of novels and stage plays. In 1975, he
received an honorary Oscar for his body of work and he became a
Commander of the Legion of Honour in 1977. He died in Beverly
Hills, California, USA on 12th February 1979 and was buried near to his
father at Essoyes, in the Champagne-Ardenne region of France.
Today, although much of his work is largely forgotten, Renoir occupies
a prominent position in the pantheon of great filmmakers. His
humanity, artistry and drive for experimentation are apparent
throughout his oeuvre. Not only was he a major influence on the
French New Wave, he remains an inspiration for the generations of
filmmakers that came afterwards, and not just in France. Renoir's
cinema has a universal and timeless appeal. Perhaps Chaplin was
right when he said: "The greatest film director in the world? In
my opinion, he's a Frenchman. He's called Jean Renoir.
© James Travers 2015
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