Extended Reading
  • Enos 2022-03-17 09:01:09

    the director said

    Jean Renoir was the second son of the French Impressionist painter Auguste Renoir. He was fascinated by the artistic environment since he was a child. As an adult, although he studied mathematics and philosophy, and later joined the army for a long time, he was unable to stop the urge to create...

  • Colton 2022-03-23 09:03:15

    study notes

    When I watched "The Great Disillusionment" about a year ago, I didn't understand Jean Renoir's omission of deliberately reducing the drama. Looking at his "Rules of the Game" now, there are still many questions.
        The film is to restore and produce a kind of "reality", no matter whether this...

  • Marco 2022-01-26 08:43:44

    The first Jean Renoir. The most modern work of the 1930s I've seen so far, both in terms of humor and scheduling thinking. Obviously there is no concept of love at all, but he lightly weaves a witty and poetic picture of the relationship between men and women. The reason why the sudden shot at the end didn't make the farce turn black is because it was only the serious and secular people out of the game, in the rules of the game where promiscuity is addictive and life is like a drama.

  • Bernardo 2022-03-27 09:01:20

    Everyone is a liar. (The middle part is too reminiscent of Fellini)

The Rules of the Game quotes

  • André Jurieux: You're the most deliciously clumsy of women.

    [kiss]

    Jackie, nièce de Christine: Am I?

    André Jurieux: You are.

    Jackie, nièce de Christine: I wish I were even clumsier.

    André Jurieux: Why?

    Jackie, nièce de Christine: So you'd kiss me more often.

    André Jurieux: Easy enough.

    [kiss]

  • Robert de la Cheyniest: Fine. So you'll tell Christine everything. To what end?

    Geneviève de Marras: To hurt you.

    Robert de la Cheyniest: Charming of you!

    Geneviève de Marras: I hate suffering alone. Misery loves company.