Renoir’s first sound film is best known for one sound in particular: the flushing of a toilet, something that rarely makes it into a sound track, even today. But On Purge Bébé is all about the fact that, underneath their three-piece suits and bodiced dresses, middle-class people have bodies, and those bodies must occasionally defecate. So that, in its own way, this parlor comedy shot on the cheap is a necessary link in the chain leading to Boudu Saved from Drowning, with its belches and sexual innuendo, and to Rules of the Game and the discreet qualms of its bourgeoisie. It concerns a mother’s attempts to administer a laxative to her tenaciously, if understandably, resistant seven-year-old who “hasn’t been,” and to draw her reluctant husband into the fray. Then there is the small matter of Papa’s porcelain business and the sale of chamber pots to a buyer for the military. This gentleman arrives just in time to render his views on plumbing, irrigation and hygiene, and he is none other than Michel Simon, mugging with a monocle. Marguerite Pierry is a Lucille Ball prototype as the desultory wife who resists both propriety and the military, remaining in robe and curlers throughout. —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
"As soon as you make a theory, facts destroy it."”– Jean Renoir Jean Renoir is not "elegant." Jean Renoir was never a "master." Though he