1930s%20French%20Cinema%20and%20Jean%20Renoir - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

1930s%20French%20Cinema%20and%20Jean%20Renoir

Description:

International acclaim New York Critics Prize for best foreign film won ... plan' (2) characters shown in their environment(s), often vast, lavish and grand. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:243
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: artsiti
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 1930s%20French%20Cinema%20and%20Jean%20Renoir


1
1930s French Cinema and Jean Renoirs La Règle du
jeu
2
Structure of lecture
  • Cinema in 1930s France history, technology and
    competing with Hollywood
  • Poetic realism (dominant movement of 1930s in
    French cinema). Hôtel du Nord.
  • Jean Renoir, cinema and politics (the 1936
    Popular Front).
  • La Règle du jeu (1939)

3
Cinema in 1930s France
  • Dominance of French cinema 1895-1914 and the rise
    of Hollywood. Sound 1927.
  • Dominance of US films in France in early 1930s
    US studio structure vs non-integrated industry.
  • French counter-attacked through regional and
    theatrical film, and through quality vs
    quantity.

4
Poetic realism 1
  • Term coined by Jean Paulhan about 1929 novel La
    Rue sans nom and used by reviewer Pierre Chenal
    1933 (Cinémonde) about film adaptation
  • Oxymoron? André Bazin poetry and realism
    work together in the cinema the greatest poetic
    realist films provoke poetry through their
    depiction of social conditions.
  • Poetic realism a quiet movement, unlike
    Surrealism, and national not international
    (Every identifiable aesthetic develops within a
    national context, even if it later bleeds across
    political borders, Dudley Andrew, Mists of
    Regret). Link to film noir.

5
Poetic realism 2 Marcel Carné and Jacques
Prévert
  • Le Quai des brumes (1938), Hôtel du Nord (1938),
    Le Jour se lève (1939), Les Enfants du Paradis
    (1942)
  • Key features - atmospheric locations, characters
    from lower social classes, gloomy or downbeat
    endings, excellent actors/acting.
  • Appeal lay between the popular and the
    sophisticated. The first foreign viewing for many
    US viewers, with art movie theaters created to
    show them.
  • Not a political movement, poetic realism evaded
    pressing political problems and wallowed in
    regret (Andrew, Mists of Regret, p.16).

6
Poetic realism 3
  • Hôtel du Nord (Louis Jouvet, Arletty, Jean-Pierre
    Aumont, Annabella). It replaces a cinema of
    events with one of people, language and milieu
    (Andrew, Mists of Regret).
  • Sets key element excellent and internationally
    famous set designers and lighting technicians.
  • International acclaim New York Critics Prize
    for best foreign film won successively by La
    Kermesse Héroïque (1935), Mayerling (1936), La
    Grande Illusion (1937), Regain (1937), La Femme
    du boulanger (1938). Feyder, Duvivier, Renoir
    other main directors contributing.
  • It is arguably not a schoolNor is it a genre,
    yet it is something more than a style (Alan
    Williams, Republic of Images p.232)

7
Renoir, cinema and politics
  • Four parts to career up to La Règle du jeu
    silent films, popular and theatrical films and
    Madame Bovary, Popular Front films,
    masterpieces 1937-39.
  • Popular Front 1936, and films follow height of
    Renoirs commitment and its decline.
  • Renoir can be tied to poetic realism only
    against his wishes and perhaps momentarily
    (Andrew, Mists of Regret p.299) in La Bête
    humaine.

8
La Règle du jeu 1 (1939)
  • Meaning of title. Games and playing appear in
    hunt, romantic liaisons/affairs and theatre.
    Rules are those of society power, liberalism,
    emotional detachment.
  • Violence, death and war
  • Theatricality (1) shows and plays (2) confusion
    between theatre and life (3) ritual
  • Places inside/outside and upstairs/downstairs,
    and intermediary spaces (corridor, entrance hall)

9
La Règle du jeu 2 camera movement and depth of
field
  • Camera is mobile, fluid, often fast-moving
  • It is in position of audience watching (stage)
    action absence of reverse shot and character
    identification
  • Characters are filmed in pairs or groups, not
    alone
  • Pan is most used shot, then tracking shot
  • Profondeur de champ (1) premier plan and
    arrière-plan (2) characters shown in their
    environment(s), often vast, lavish and grand.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com