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Director |
|
Year |
1930-1960 |
Country |
Erich Von Stroheim, Ingrid Bergman, Jean Gabin, Jean Marais, Simone Simon
Certificate |
PG |
Length |
708 mins |
Label |
OPTIM |
Format |
DVD Colour |
Region |
2 |
Aspect |
1.33:1 |
Cat No |
OPTD0867 |
Main Language |
French |
Subtitles |
English |
Jean Renoir (1894-1979) ranks among the most influential film-makers in the history of the medium. An inspiration to the poetic realists, the neo-realists, the mavericks of the nouvelle vague and cine-humanists like Satyajit Ray, Kon Ichikawa and Jacques Becker, he began his career in the silent era and it's good to see that this boxed set of restored classics includes such early works as Sur un Air de Charleston (1927) and La Petite Marchande d'Allumettes (1928) among the extras.
Already a key figure in French cinema during the optimistic Popular Front era, Renoir secured an international reputation with the Great War POW drama, La Grande Illusion. Co-scripted with Charles Spaak and starring Jean Gabin and Renoir's own directorial mentor, Erich von Stroheim, this pacifist tract challenged the continent's drift towards war by calling for co-operation between its nations and classes. Renoir would return to this theme in Le Caporal épinglé, which used the escape attempts of Second World War conscripts Jean-Pierre Cassel and Claude Brasseur to stress that inaction is not an option in times of crisis.
Financed by public subscription, La Marseillaise was a boisterous account of the Marseilles Battalion's march on Paris that reflected Renoir's conviction that change could only be brought about by the masses. And he remained among the proletariat for La Bête Humaine, a grittily noirish adaptation of Emile Zola's novel, in which Simone Simon betrays stationmaster husband Fernand Ledoux with train driver Jean Gabin, who again captured the pre-war mood of pessimism with another tangibly tragic display of doomed heroism.
Having seen out the war in Hollywood, Renoir remained an auteur in exile until the early 1950s. Unsurprisingly, therefore, a mood of nostalgia permeated such lavish colour spectacles as Elena et les Hommes, in which Ingrid Bergman's Polish countess rejects money and military might to marry an aristocratic charmer. Renoir similarly paid tribute to Paris in Le Déjeuner sur l'Herbe, which followed Le Testament du Docteur Cordelier, the same year's reworking of ‘Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’, in warning against the dangers of unregulated scientific endeavour.
David Parkinson on 21st May 2007
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