Film Review
One of the undisputed all time classics of French cinema,
La Règle du Jeu
is also widely regarded as Jean Renoir's best film, a sublime masterpiece of filmmaking
technique and satirical verve. Alternating between high drama and music hall farce,
it has simultaneously the sophistication of a great work of art and also the sense of
anarchistic fun of a student comic play.
Filmed with the eye of a cinematographic
genius, with excellent acting throughout,
La Règle du Jeu is a classic in
the truest sense of the word. The film was intended as a social satire on the class system in France of the 1930s, making
fun of both the aristocracy and the working classes, but its incisive wit and provocative
study of human nature gives it a timeless quality which makes it relevant to any generation
of cinema going audience.
One of the most extraordinary characteristics of the film is how it manages to avoid fitting
into the conventional genres of cinema. It is neither a farce, drama, romance, tragedy
or satire, but it is somehow a combination of all of these at the same time. Some
parts of the film are outrageously funny, for example the famous party scene, which quickly
degenerates into farce before reaching its tense and dramatic climax.
For the most part, the film resembles a tongue-in-cheek satire on bourgeois life, and
Renoir's intense distaste with the High Bourgeoisie is apparent throughout. By portraying
the ruling classes as insensitive automata blindly adhering to an unwritten code of honour
(la régle du jeu) and incapable of showing genuine emotion, Renoir makes his most
damning comment on upper class standards and behaviours. The "he has class" line
at the end of the film when one house guest comments on his host's sang froid is said
in praise but Renoir clearly meant something very different.
Renoir is no more enamoured of the working classes, whom he presents as subservient menials
whose greatest pleasure is to clean the boots of their overlords. Compared with
the passionless romantic tangles of their lords and masters, affairs of the heart drive
the domestics to throw themselves at each other in a comic fight to the death. Only
the sage social parasite Octave (played by Renoir himself) is capable of feeling genuine
love, but he, tragically, is the one person who least equipped to win it.
The style in which the film is shot is no less unsettling than its content. In contrast
to the conventions of the day, Renoir uses techniques which gives his film an almost neo-realist
feel - for example, his preference for wide-angled long shots. As a result,
the film has a strange naturalistic quality which is almost nearer to a documentary than
a theatrical work. The place where this is most apparent is the hunt scene, which
culminates in a rapid succession of shocking images of wanton brutality as rabbits and
pheasants are slaughtered in front of the camera.
The scene, with its raw candour,
not only further alienates the spectator from the gentry but prepares us for the film's
shocking ending. In Renoir's eyes, not only do the aristocracy have no passion in
affairs of the heart, they also seem to have scant respect for life - to them, it is all
a game. This explains why, when the gamekeeper goes on a killer rampage during the
party, the house guests assume it is just part of the entertainment which has been lain
on for them.
Although
La Régle du jeu is now safely acknowledged as one of the greatest
films in cinema history, it has certainly had a chequered history. The film was,
at the time it was made, one of Renoir's most ambitious films, costing around five million
Francs, but it was a commercial disaster. At its first showing in Paris in July
1939, the film was reviled by the audience and Renoir was forced to make drastic cuts
to the film, reducing it to 80 minutes. Released in its new form, the film fared
no better - it was condemned by critics and public alike for its scandalous and depressing
tone. Under the occupation during World war II, the film was banned, and soon disappeared
into obscurity. The film resurfaced in the late 1950s, having been fully restored
(under Renoir's supervision), and following its showing at the Venice film festival in
1959 it was instantly established as one of the genuine masterpieces of world cinema.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Renoir film:
Swamp Water (1941)
Film Synopsis
The aviator André Jurieux returns to France after a record-breaking flight, but
is heart-broken when the woman he loves, Christine de la Chesnaye, is not there to meet
him. His friend, Octave, contrives to have André invited to the Chesnayes'
country mansion for a weekend of hunting and partying. Christine's husband, Robert,
has also been having a secret affair, and he has invited his mistress, Geneviève,
for the weekend, but only with the intention of ending the affair. Octave, who has
himself loved Christine since she was a girl, warns André that he cannot expect
to win Christine, for that would breach the 'rules of the game'. Whilst the party
is in full swing, the Chesnayes' gamekeeper, Schumacher, discovers that his wife, Christine's
maid, has been flirting with another servant, Marceau, and is determined to kill him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.