Renoir is faithful to Flaubert’s story of a woman who craves passion in provincial life. British critic Tom Milne wrote in Sight & Sound: “Renoir was intermittently attempting to…suggest that people exist in a milieu rather than against a setting….In 1934, with Madame Bovary…he perfected this technique….The whole feeling and meaning of the novel is intact….The dichotomy between the beauty of the countryside and the bleak desert which Emma’s boredom makes of it is beautifully conveyed.” Among the film’s contemporary admirers was Bertolt Brecht. Renoir himself hints at why, when he notes, “I insisted on the absolute realism of the location, of the background action, and I insisted, on the contrary, on the absolute composed character of the foreground. I insisted that my actors act as if they were in the theater, in good theater, of course….Valentine Tessier [is] an absolutely staggering, touching Madame Bovary….My brother, who was so at ease and moving in his part [as Charles Bovary], and also the unforgettable Max Dearly….A man who played midget fairies is a man who can play the pharmacist Homais…” —BAM/PFA
The son of the painter Auguste Renoir, Jean Renoir became one of France’s most important and respected filmmakers during the middle of the 20th century. A Philosophy and Math student, Renoir became a cavalryman, but was invalided out of the army before World War I. Later, he married a model and aspiring actress, and, following the death of his father and the acquisition of an inheritance, set up his own production company to produce movies for his wife. Renoir learned from these early experiences of financing movies and watching other films, and became a director in 1924. With the advent of sound, Renoir’s career was quickly made with a series of profitable films, including La Chienne (1931), a savage and dark drama about a man’s self-destruction, which was later remade by Fritz Lang as Scarlet Street. Renoir’s subsequent films, including The Lower Depths (1936) and Grand Illusion (1937), were among the finest made in France before the war, and were well acknowledged at the time of… read more