Before The Deluge-With Jean Renoir’s The Rules Of The Game
In Mind
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
The Rules of the Game, starring Nora Gregor, Marcel Dalio,
Jean Renoir, Roland Toutain, directed by Jean Renoir, 1939
Here is one film, Jean Renoir’s classic The Rules of the Game, that a look at the release date tells a lot.1939
as Europe, as the world eventually, was on the eve of war, tells even the naïve
that a film about the decadent morals and devil-may-care attitude about what
was coming among the upper crust would not sit pretty with a government that itself
was decadent and ill-prepared to fight a second war in a generation. That
notwithstanding this is a great film of manners and a bit of a sent up of life among
the upper set and their foibles in the late Third Republic. The nice trick is that
these foibles are placed on display by Renoir for the servants and for us to
see-and comment on.
The storyline is pretty convention as such comedic efforts
go. It is the cinematography and scene-settings that are the remarkable parts
of the film. Here a famous French aviator on the order of Charles Lindberg in
his country, Andre, is head over heels in love with Christine the wife of rich
landowner, Robert, with a country estate well outside of Paris (of course
having a place in town as well). Robert has his own liaisons and life but one
must keep up appearances. The long and short of the situation is that Octave a
mutual friend of Andre and Robert’s wrangles an invitation for Andre to go to the
country estate for a time. There all hell breaks loose as all the various
romantic machinations are played out between Andre and Christine, Robert and
his lover, Christine’s maid and her husband, the gamekeeper of the estate, and
a budding thing the maid had with a poacher.
Nothing good can come of this and nothing does, at least for
Andre who winds up dead, very dead after a famous scene where the gamekeeper
who had spied in the greenhouse someone whom he thought was his wife with Andre
and after a couple of identity miscues shot him dead. After all this high speed
romance and intrigue the highest level of energy the landowner Robert could come
up with is that the whole thing was an accident. This is one time that the simplicity
of the plot-line does not convey the intricacies of the goings-on. So see this world
classic film that back in the late 1960s and early 1970s was playing almost continuously
at the Brattle Theater in Cambridge as a whole generation rediscovered what great
film-making was all about. Rediscovered those foreign film gems that the French
in particular were producing before film noir hit the world.
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