THE RULES OF THE GAME — THE CRITERION COLLECTION
Welcome!
Groupthink doesn't live here, critical thought does.This ad-free website is dedicated to Agnès Varda and to Luis Buñuel.
Get cool rewards when you click on the button to pledge your support through Patreon.
Thanks a lot acorns!
Your kind generosity keeps the reviews coming!
To the eyes of most modern filmgoers Jean Renoir's masterpiece of French Cinema may seem like nothing more than a farcical treatment of class distinctions. It is much more than that.
The film's pre-roll advises, "This entertainment, set on the eve of World War II, does not claim to be a study of manners. Its characters are purely fictitious." "The Rules of the Game" is a caustic satirical dissection of bourgeois mores and the use of manners to mask frequently adulterous, and sometimes lethal, sins. That both French and German authorities banned the film even after distributors edited it, speaks to Renoir’s not-so-subtle thematic arrows that hit every bull’s-eye.
Son of the admired painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, writer/director/producer/actor Jean Renoir enjoyed full artistic license in making the picture. He nevertheless met with fierce resistance and setbacks toward achieving his artistic vision. Renoir loosely based his story on Alfred de Musset's "Les Caprices de Marianne."
The venue is a weekend party at the luxurious mansion estate of Marquis Robert de la Chesnaye (Marcel Dalio). Robert's popular wife Christine (Nora Gregor) has recently been at the center of a public scandal related to the "heroic" aviator André Jurieux (Roland Toutain). Christine's absence at André's welcoming party for his 23-hour solo flight across the Atlantic causes the heartbroken pilot to publicly lash out at her during a live radio broadcast, and error in judgement that he immediately comes to regret.
The hopelessly smitten André implores his best friend Octave (delightfully played by Renoir) to gain him admittance to the La Chesnaye party despite his atrocious behavior. Christine will be in attendance.
As a longtime friend to Christine and her highly regarded father, Octave obliges. The stage is set for charged romantic conflict in the estate's upstairs/downstairs world of privilege where the rules of the game are set, shattered, and reset.
Octave speaks the story's theme line when he states, "There's one thing that's terrifying in this world, and that is that every man has his reasons." As much a predictor of Hitler's approaching devastation of lives and culture, the dialogue strikes at the heart of the anti-Semitic segment of the French public that went ballistic when they saw the film. They took particular umbrage at Renoir's casting of Jewish actor Marcel Dalio as the story's ostensibly wealthiest French character.
"The Rules of the Game" is both funny and dramatic. Renoir's inspired attempt to show that no one is entirely good or bad comes under a prismatic magnifying glass during the film's coda. One of the bourgeois partygoers defends their host's best effort at bringing closure to the weekend's violent climax. The man pronounces, "La Chesnaye has class," something "that's become rare." The ethically ambiguous attitude points up a cultural environment ripe for abuse.
Not Rated. 110 mins.
Comments