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Whirlpool of Fate

La fille de l'eau

France

1925

71 Min
Black and White
French, Silent
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Jean Renoir

PROD Jean Renoir

SCR Pierre Lestringuez

DP Jean Bachelet, Alphonse Gibory

CAST Catherine Hessling, Pierre Champagne, Maurice Touzé, Georges Térof, Pierre Lestringuez, Harold Levingston

PROD DES Jean Renoir

Synopsis

The last model for Renoir père, Dédée, became the first model and wife of the son, changing her name to Catherine Hessling for films. According to an interview in the documentary Jean Renoir, Renoir in those early years “saw the cinema solely through her eyes. All his films reflect his love for her.” André Bazin notes, “She was a curious creature, at once mechanical and living, ethereal and sensuous. But it seems to me that Renoir saw her less as a director than as a painter…worried less about directing the actress in her dramatic role than…about photographing the woman from every possible angle.” La Fille de l’eau, Renoir’s first solo directorial effort, was written for Hessling by Pierre Lestringuez, who also plays the lecherous uncle to the persecuted young heroine. The film, a melodrama marked by cruelty, was shot in natural settings but blurs the boundaries between the natural and dream worlds. A much-admired dream sequence was shown separately in avant-garde circles. —BAM/PFA

Director

Original

Jean Renoir

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

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Picture of mcdill

mcdill

6Nov12

That dream sequence....

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Lefteris Becerra

4Oct10

amazing firsts steps of who was to become a cinema giant!

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