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La Regle du Jeu Recommended by MovieMail

La Regle du Jeu  Sleeve

Our DVD Price: £15.99

RRP: £19.99 Save £4.00 (20%)

 

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Film Description

Dismissed by both public and critics on its first release, re-cut by its producers and then banned by the French government as 'demoralising', La Règle du Jeu now has an established place in Top Ten greatest film lists of both critics and directors alike. On the surface a series of triangular dramas taking place over a country house weekend, the film is in fact a study in the corruption and decay of a dying social class - if not a whole society. Its reputation as one of the greatest films ever made is indisputable. RA

 

Film Information

Director Jean Renoir
Starring Jean Renoir, Marcel Dalio, Roland Toutain

 

Genre World Cinema

 

Country France Language FRENCH   Year 1939

 

DVD Extras

Includes 42 minute documentary on the making of the film.

 

Technical Details

Certificate PG   Length 110 mins   Label BFI
Cat No BFIVD583   Format DVD   Black & White
Region2   Aspect 4:3
Subtitles English.

 

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3 Stills

 

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Reviews & Articles

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Review by RA on 3rd September 2001

Standing simultaneously at the climax and at the end of French classical realism and epitomising all that Renoir stood for, La Regle du Jeu is much, much more than a comedy of manners. It is a map of France.

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Review by John Evans on 2nd September 2000

This ‘society farce’ is about honour, class and infidelity. Its influences being the Comedie Francais and the classics of Comeille and Racene. An ensemble of players pirouette towards an eventual tragedy. Triangles of indiscretion above and below stairs show that behaviour is only superficially a matter of class. Nobility and servants are confidants in a tradition which represents a closed society. Class conflicts are elsewhere. The film is not so much dissected but embraced by Renoir’s humanism. He also plays a bumbling central character. Most of the characters reflect this warmth despite their amorality. Eros is ever present in Renoir, ever enjoyable, ever destructive. Ironically, the more honourable participants are boorish but we see the passions, the decadence that lies beneath the surface of the discreet charm of the nobility and the upper bourgeoisie. The sweetness of polite sentimentality is exposed. The film depicts an end to an era and presages the coming of the Second World War. Made in 1939, it was banned. Not least because Renoir casts a French Jew and an Austrian as Marquis and Marchioness. The film is a cinematic joy. Characters are interwoven as in a fine tapestry. Conversation and action overlapped as in the composition of a fugue; most evidently in a breathtaking house party scene where pretence and reality becomes hilariously and farcically entangled. The film is composed of some thirty tracking shots, thus allowing the action to flow. This has the effect of making even the small roles as much a part of the whole as the leading players. There are no villains (despite Renoir’s view that his character was ‘the villain’) but it is about decades and hypocrisy and the consequences for those who break the ‘rules of the game’. The dance macabre replaces the jolly entertainment, there is the death; comedy is replaced by tragedy, shadows fall upon the walls and doors close. Classical realism’s ability to encompass moral forces however ironically is now lost in the cinema and in an age of moral ambiguity this film is a reminder to us of universality.

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Review by Barry Forshaw on 1st July 2003

Lists of the 10 best films ever made fluctuate with fashion (just like everything else), but you can always be sure that certain titles will be there. Welles' Citizen Kane, Bergman's Wild Strawberries and Renoir's enduring masterpiece. It's amazing to consider now that this humane and intelligent comedy of manners was ignored by the public and damned by the critics in its day (not to mention the further indignity of being re-cut by the distributors). Looked at today, this picture of French society on the eve of the outbreak of World War Two remains as fresh and affecting as ever.

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Article - "23 Must-See Films" by John Davies
Thursday 1st January 2004

23. PIERROT LE FOU (GODARD, 1965)


A delight for intellectuals, hedonists and video store film geeks-turned-director alike, here's the quintessential Godard; less famous than the groundbreaking Breathless, less masterfully controlled than...  View article in full

 

 

Article - "The Profound Cinematic Vision of Satyajit Ray" by Andrew Robinson
Thursday 7th June 2007

Talking to Richard Attenborough recently in an interview for the current DVD release of Satyajit Ray’s The Chess Players, I was struck by how deeply he admired Ray. Without the least prodding from me, Attenborough referred to Ray, Akira Kurosawa and Charles Chaplin a...  View article in full

 

 

 

 

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Collections & Lists

This film is part of the following Film Collections

 

Sight and Sound Critics Choice 2002

Including: 2001: A Space Odyssey, Andrei Rublev, Au Hasard Balthazar, Bicycle Thieves, Breathless (Godard, 1959), Charlie Chaplin - City Lights, Fanny and Alexander, Fellinis 8 1/2, Intolerance, Ivan The Terrible (Parts 1 & 2).

 

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MovieMail Top 100 Best-Sellers of All-Time by MovieMail

This is your list: the 100 films you've bought the most of in the 10 years of MovieMail's existence. There are some surprise entries and some glaring omissions – but it’s all true, and, frankly, you’ve got very good taste! It’s such a good list that we're going to make it a permanent fixture on our website and to celebrate the launch we’ve slashed many of the prices on these wonderful films. Enjoy!

 

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