Daily Archives: February 5, 2014

The Rules of the Game (1939)

The Rules of the Game (“La regle du jeu”)
Directed by Jean Renoir
Written by Jean Renoir and Carl Koch
1939/France
Nouvelles Éditions de Films (NEF)

Repeat viewing/Criterion Collection DVD
#138 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Octave: I want to disappear down a hole.

Robert de la Cheyniest: Why’s that?

Octave: So I no longer have to figure out what’s right and what’s wrong.[/box]

I’ve been putting off writing this review because I just can’t find the words to describe how I feel about this film, which I consider to be one of the supreme masterpieces of cinema.

André Jurieux is welcomed as a hero after he has crossed the Atlantic solo in less than 24 hours.  He is despondent, however, because his muse Christine de la Cheyniest did not meet him on arrival.  She is at home with her husband Robert (Dalio) listening to the event on the radio.  Christine considers André a friend, though her maid Lisette says friendship with a man is impossible.  When Robert learns that the relationship is innocent he starts to feel guilty about his own affair with Genevieve and tries to break it off.  André’s friend Octave (Renoir) tries to console the suicidal pilot and finally convinces Christine and Robert to invite him to their country estate.  Genevieve also coerces Robert into inviting her.

Lisette is married to the De la Cheyniest country gamekeeper Shumacher (Gaston Modot), a situation that suits her as long as they are separated by hundreds of miles and she is free for hanky-panky.  Shortly after arrival, Robert meets poacher Marceau (Carette) and wants to hire him to rid the estate of rabbits.  But Marceau has long dreamed of becoming a domestic and Robert complies by taking him on as part of the house staff.  Marceau soon begins a flirtation with Lisette, enraging the jealous Shumacher who chases him for the remainder of the film, sometimes at gun point.

The country visit includes two notable events, a formal hunt and a costume party including a kind of talent show.  During the hunt, Nora spies Robert giving an affectionate good-bye kiss to Genevieve.  She had been oblivious of the affair, which was common knowledge to everyone else, and now believes her entire marriage has been based on a lie.  She lashes out during the party by selecting a random guest for a tryst of her own.  A farcical chase and general mayhem centering on the upstairs and downstairs lovers ultimately ends in tragedy.

 

Robert refers to Octave as a “dangerous poet” and this is an apt description of Renoir especially in this savage examination of French society between the wars.  It is a world where mechanical birds are treasured and real birds are shot, true love is punished and infidelity exalted, and crimes are overlooked to preserve the peace.  I see Jurieux as a stand in for Czechoslovakia, a sacrificial lamb led to the altar to allow the status quo to persist for a few days longer.  All this is hidden beneath the surface in a farce worthy of Moliere.

The flm making is exquisite..  Who can ever forget the barbaric hunt, a masterpiece of montage editting, ending in the extended shot of the quivering rabbit?  The entertainment at the party is equally mesmerizing.  I love the shot of Dalio showing off his huge triumphant “music box” as his world disintegrates around him.

I can and have watched this over and over with exactly the same interest, noticing something new each time.  Is that not the definition of a classic?

Re-release trailer

 

You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man (1939)

You Can’t Cheat an Honest Manyou-cant-cheat-an-honest-man-poster
Directed by George Marshall
Written by George Marion Jr et al and story by W.C. Fields (as Charles Bogle)
1939/USA
Universal Pictures

First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Whipsnade: As my dear old grandfather Litvak said (just before they swung the trap), he said “You can’t cheat an honest man. Never give a sucker an even break or smarten up a chump.”[/box]

I’m not a huge W.C. Fields fan, but this movie is a cut above his lesser work.

Larson E. (get it?) Whipsnade (Fields) runs a carnival sideshow and is arrears on wages to his performers.  Charlie McCarthy complains constantly to ventriloquist The Great Edgar (Edgar Bergen) about this.  But Edgar is not willing to quit once he sets eyes on Whipsnade’s lovely daughter.

You Can't Cheat an Honest Man 1

Fields with Eddie “Rochester” Anderson

I found several of the bits amusing if not laugh out loud funny.  The insults exchanged between Fields and the dummy are cute.  Your mileage may vary depending on your feelings about Fields and/or Bergen, whose routines occupy about 90% of the film.

Clip – the ping-pong match

 

The Mikado (1939)

The Mikado
Directed by Victor Schertzinger
Written by William S. Gilbert (libretto to the operetta)
1939/UK

Repeat viewing/ Streamed on Netflix Instant

 

[box] My object all sublime/ I shall achieve in time —/ To let the punishment fit the crime —/ The punishment fit the crime;/ And make each prisoner pent/ Unwillingly represent/ A source of innocent merriment!/ Of innocent merriment! — lyric by W.S. Gilbert[/box]

If you love Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, as I do, The Mikado as performed by their own company is not to be missed.

This is a send up of British Victorian manners disguised as a silly tale of happenings at the Japanese Imperial Court.  The Mikado’s son, Nanki-Poo, has been sentenced to death for flirting.  He is also in trouble for refusing to marry the elderly horror Katisha.  He disguises himself as a Second Trombone and heads off to the town where his beloved Yum-Yum resides.  She is engaged to marry her guardian Ko-Ko, who was recently named Lord High Executioner by the Mikado.  Many, many complications and some very witty songs ensue.

Well, I could eat this up with a spoon.  The only complaint I have is that some of the songs in the stage operetta have been truncated or cut entirely.  The performances are spot on as could be expected from a production by The D’Oyly Carte Opera Company.  This was the first three-strip Technicolor picture distributed by Universal Pictures.  The film was released by the Criterion Collection in a package set with Topsy-Turvy, the 1999 biopic about the creation of The Mikado, which I also highly recommend to G&S lovers.

“Trailer” for Criterion Collection edition – “Three Little Maids from School”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrUfX_8l4qY

Bonus – Topsy-Turvy trailer