Yahoo Web Search

  1. The Rules of the Game

    The Rules of the Game

    1950 · Comedy drama · 1h 50m

Search results

  1. The Rules of the Game: Directed by Jean Renoir. With Nora Gregor, Paulette Dubost, Mila Parély, Odette Talazac. A bourgeois life in France at the onset of World War II, as the rich and their poor servants meet up at a French chateau.

    • (31K)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • Jean Renoir
    • 1950-04-08
  2. Oct 21, 2020 · The Rules of the Game (1939) ★★★★ (4 out of 4 stars) - Instead Renoir produced a bawdy comedy with French airs and graces, which seems to share much in common with so many American films of the late thirties with their loose morals, gender distortions, and hedonistic flushes of romance.

  3. Huge-spirited and sharp-eyed, Jean Renoir’s French-society fresco gathers high classes and low for a weekend of country-house fallout. Made on the cusp of WWII, Jean Renoir’s satire of the upper-middle classes was banned as demoralising by the French government for two decades after its release.

  4. Overview. A weekend at a marquis’ country château lays bare some ugly truths about a group of haut bourgeois acquaintances. Jean Renoir. Director, Screenplay. Carl Koch. Novel.

  5. Considered one of the greatest films ever made, The Rules of the Game (La règle du jeu), by Jean Renoir, is a scathing critique of corrupt French society cloaked in a comedy of manners in which a weekend at a marquis’ country château lays bare some ugly truths about a group of haut bourgeois acquaintances.

    • Jean Renoir
    • Marcel Dalio, Nora Gregor, Mila Parély
  6. La Règle du Jeu (The Rules of the Game, 1939), directed by Jean Renoir. © 2021, by M. Keith Booker. In his review of Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game, written to accompany the Criterion release of the film, Alexander Sesonske declares that the film is “a dazzling accomplishment, original in form and style, a comic tragedy, absurd and ...

  7. People also ask

  8. La Règle du jeu est un des films les plus commentés de l'histoire du cinéma. Il a influencé un nombre très important de scénaristes, de réalisateurs [note 2]. Selon François Truffaut, La Règle du jeu constitue « le credo des cinéphiles, le film des films » [3].

  1. People also search for