Jean Renoir, the Rules of the Game, Reputation, and Revisionism
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Date
2012
Authors
Cardullo, Robert J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Jean Renoir's film La Regle du jeu (The Rules of the Game) was first shown in Paris, in 1939, and is now generally regarded as one of his masterpieces. But there is a strange side to the film. What most critics and reference books say concerning it-and they tend to say much the same thing-does not, to put it bluntly, square with the facts. What they say is that La Regle du jeu is about an aristocratic house-party that is a microcosm of the corruptness and exhaustion of French society on the eve of World War II. Far from perceiving in La Regle du jeu evidence of the corruption and exhaustion in French society that led to the country's defeat and occupation by the Germans during World War II, however, the author of this essay attempts to see the film for what it is-not for what historicist critics want it to be.
Description
Keywords
artistic reputation, France, Jean Renoir, revisionist interpretation, The Rules of the Game, World War II
Fields of Science
0508 media and communications, 0602 languages and literature, 05 social sciences, 06 humanities and the arts
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q
Q3

OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Romance Quarterly
Volume
59
Issue
4
Start Page
247
End Page
256
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Citations
Scopus : 0
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Mendeley Readers : 3
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0.0
Sustainable Development Goals
16
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS


