A Day in the Country
Partie de campagne
Jean Renoir (15 September 1894 – 12 February 1979) was a French film director, screenwriter, actor, producer and author. As a film director and actor, he made more than forty films from the silent era to the end of the 1960s. As an author, he wrote the definitive biography of his father, the painter, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Renoir, My Father (1962). In the 1930s, Renoir was associated with the Popular Front, and several of his films reflect the movement's left-wing politics and deal with social issues as well as class disparities. He was perhaps the most significant director of the poetic realism movement. The satirical comedy-drama film The Rules of the Game (1939) is often cited by critics as among the greatest films ever made; it is the only film to earn a place among the top ten films in the respected British Film Institute's Sight & Sound decennial critics' poll for every decade from the poll's inception in 1952 through the 2012 list. Other important works are Grand Illusion (1937), A Day in the Country (1946) and The River (1951). Andrew Sarris in his influential book of film criticism The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929–1968 included him in the "pantheon" of the 14 greatest film directors who had worked in the United States.
Born: 1894-09-15 in Paris, France
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Partie de campagne
Le Procès d'Emma Bovary
The Christian Licorice Store
Une vie sans joie
La Bête humaine
Louis Lumière
The Spanish Earth
Mam'zelle Nitouche
D'un Céline l'autre
La Règle du jeu
Cinéastes de notre temps : Erich von Stroheim
Langlois
Ceux de chez-nous
La P’tite Lili
Le Petit Théâtre de Jean Renoir
Postface: La Petite Marchande d'allumettes
François Truffaut l'insoumis
La Direction d'acteur par Jean Renoir
Quand Jean devint Renoir
Jean Renoir parle de son art
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