| |
|
|
Jean
Renoir
For a sample list of available titles and additional
research resources at UCLA please download our expanded collection
profile
In 1975 Jean Renoir was awarded an honorary Academy Award for his lifetime
contribution to film. He is considered one of the first great "auteurs,"
a cinematic master whose distinctive style always contained a concern
for human issues and a reverence for natural beauty.
As the son of the great impressionist painter, Auguste Renoir, the filmmaker
as a young man was encouraged to freely explore artistic and intellectual
pursuits. He eventually chose ceramics, but during a long convalescence,
developed a passion for film. He started his own production company in
1924, largely in order to launch the acting career of his wife, Catherine
Hessling. His first film, LA FILLE DE L'EAU (1925) THE WHIRLPOOL OF FATE,
and other silent films display early signs of what was to become characteristic
of Renoir's work--a sense of visual realism, the love of nature and the
poetic representation of the physical environment. Film theorist Andre
Bazin praised Renoir's early works for their modest use of camera movement
and editing and emphasis on deep focus photography. Bazin argued that
these techniques could lead the spectator to a more direct relationship
with the landscapes and characters.
It was Renoir's "Popular Front" films of the late 1930s which
brought him international acclaim. These films include such incontrovertible
cinematic classics as LE CRIME DE M. LANGE (1936) THE CRIME OF MR. LANGE,
LA BETE HUMAINE (1938) THE HUMAN BEAST, LA REGLE DU JEU (1939) THE RULES
OF THE GAME and LA GRANDE ILLUSION (1937) THE GRAND ILLUSION. Renoir lived
in the United States in the 1940s and continued his career under contract
to 20th-Century Fox. His films from
the time period include THIS LAND IS MINE (1943), DIARY OF A CHAMBERMAID
(1946), and THE WOMAN ON THE BEACH (1947). The UCLA Film and Television
Archive has preserved the 1945 film, THE SOUTHERNER. Although Renoir considered
his tenure in Hollywood a period of "unrealized works and unrealized
hopes," this film is a beautifully crafted story of a migrant worker
who tries to start his own farm and who faces enormous hardship. Before
Renoir returned to France, he travelled to India to make THE RIVER (1951).
The film was made in Technicolor, and Renoir used this to explore the
texture of the Indian landscape and culture.
|