Rent The Rules of the Game (1939)

3.7 of 5 from 192 ratings
1h 47min
Rent The Rules of the Game (aka La règle du jeu) Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
  • General info
  • Available formats
Synopsis:
Denigrated by the public, vilified by the critics, re-cut at the insistence of its producers, and finally banned by the French government as 'demoralising' and unpatriotic, La Regle du jeu was a commercial disaster at the time of its original release. On the surface, a series of interlinked romantic intrigues taking place at a weekend shooting party in a country chateau, the film is in fact a study of the corruption and decay within French society on the eve of the outbreak of World War II.
Actors:
, , , , , , Anne Mayen, Lise Elina, , , , , , , , , , , , Celestin
Directors:
Producers:
Jean Renoir
Writers:
Jean Renoir, Carl Koch
Aka:
La règle du jeu
Studio:
BFI Video
Genres:
Classics, Comedy, Drama
Collections:
10 Films to Watch If You Like Gosford Park, 21 Reasons to Love, 21 Reasons to Love... Ingmar Bergman, A Brief History of French Poetic Realism, Films to Watch If You Like..., Hare We Go Again! - Bunny Movies For Easter: Part 2, Holidays Film Collection, A Brief History of Film..., The Instant Expert's Guide, The Instant Expert's Guide to François Truffaut, The Instant Expert's Guide to Jean Renoir, The Instant Expert's Guide to: Mel Brooks, The Instant Expert's Guide to: Robert Altman, Top 10 Films By Year, Top 10 Films of 1939, Top 10 Films of 1979, Top 10 Screen Kisses (1896-1979)
Countries:
France
BBFC:
Release Date:
02/06/2003
Run Time:
110 minutes
Languages:
French LPCM Mono
Subtitles:
English
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Full Screen 1.33:1 / 4:3
Colour:
B & W
Bonus:
  • An absorbing documentary on the making of La Regle du jeu
BBFC:
Release Date:
29/05/2023
Run Time:
107 minutes
Languages:
French LPCM Mono
Subtitles:
English
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Full Screen 1.37:1
Colour:
B & W
BLU-RAY Regions:
B
Bonus:
  • Newly commissioned commentary by film writers David Jenkins and Trevor Johnston
  • Image par image: La Regie du jeu (1987, 43 mins): Jean Douchet and Pierre Oscar Levy provide a detailed analysis of La Regie du jeu
  • Leslie Caron on La Regie du jeu (2016,18 mins): the actor introduces Renoir's classic as part of the Screen Epiphanies series at BFI Southbank
  • La Vie est a nous (1936, 64 mins): French Communist Party election film depicting political turmoil and the threat of fascism, with creative input from Jean Renoir and Henri Cartier-Bresson, among
  • others
  • Pheasant Shooting (1913,1 min): newsreel item on the start of the shooting season in a Norfolk game reserve
  • Society on the Moors (1921,1 min): newsreel footage of Lord and Lady Savile's shooting party on the Yorkshire Moors near Hebden Bridge
  • Stills gallery

More like The Rules of the Game

Reviews (4) of The Rules of the Game

Great piece of cinema - The Rules of the Game review by Oli

Spoiler Alert
12/01/2018

I think the 2 above (or below!) were taking things a bit too seriously, or maybe they just aren’t used to this style, I’m not sure, if you think about it this is a very good film with lots of witty dialogue, maybe it’s because I’ve seen many worse films but this is certainly a very memorable film with lots of great dialogue, sure the black and white quality isn’t the best but it doesn’t need to be, also I think the scenes work perfectly together, and there’s a lot of great acting here mainly by Marcel Diallo, but also the gentleman who plays Marceau as well and the sergeant looking type. It’s very French style of humour, very dramatic, a man is in love with another mans wife, a fight breaks out, someone fires a revolver, more arguing ensues, then it turns out the wife has infact ran off with another man, there are some really strong messages here, I particulary liked the quote ‘I don’t love you anymore, I have great affection’ there’s just many great moments in this film that would certainly make it rewatchable, like I said there’s many strong messages and the combination of great acting, great witty dialogue, useful messages make it a classic French film.

2 out of 2 members found this review helpful.

More than a game. - The Rules of the Game review by RhysH

Spoiler Alert
14/08/2018

How can a film so hated by critics at the time become nearly eighty years later praised as one of the great films in the history of cinema? Certainly the depiction of the French upper class and their moral callousness would not have been endearing to the ruling class and indeed the film was banned because of the effect it might have on the morals of the young. Renoir wrote that, "During the shooting of the film I was torn between my desire to make a comedy of it and the wish to tell a tragic story." A year after the film's release the Germans marched into Paris.

The acting is often too studied, the realisation at times farcical but beneath the frivolous surface is, in retrospect, our knowledge that these characters are about to be pawns in the rules of the game of war. Renoir wrote, "it is a war film and yet there is no reference to the war. Beneath its seemingly innocuous appearance the story attacks the very structure of our society."

For me the best performance is by the director himself, Jean Renoir plays Octave with a wonderful mix of comedy and Pathos.

The cinematography is wonderful a true masterclass in effective use of a camera.

Renoir was so concerned about the reception of the film that he "resolved either to give up the cinema or leave France".

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

French Farce - The Rules of the Game review by AM

Spoiler Alert
03/11/2015

Really didn't enjoy this film. I only got it because the reviews had been good which I really don't understand! A sort of French farce, very manic, lots of infidelity...it's quite hard to keep up with all the shenanigans!

Very disappointing!

0 out of 4 members found this review helpful.

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