La Chienne

Posted 2 April 2008 in Screening log

Rating 1931 Fra Dir Jean Renoir Cast Michel Simon, Janie Marèse, Georges Flamant, Roger Gaillard IMDb

I wish I had Lang’s Scarlet Street on hand to rewatch on the heels of this, for I wonder if there is a better example anywhere of two artists taking the same material and crafting completely different and completely brilliant products out of it. As well as I can recall, excepting some fuller exposition, Scarlet Street is quite similar in its narrative development until the conclusion, and of course unique in tone, pitched more in the key of noir, making it a psychological story, at times bitingly vicious.

Chienne is thoroughly Renoir (the social-comedy Renoir and the ironic-tragedy Renoir and neither & nothing, as the opening-scene puppet show variously contends), so this is equally vicious, but in a lighter and more personal way, and perhaps all the more searing for it — Renoir as director seems to me like a loving and judgmental god with a sense of humor, pulling the strings.

I like Simon here as much as Robinson in the lead role, but without the same cultural baggage attached to him the role goes over differently. It’s rather shocking to see Edward G Robinson in a ruffled apron; Simon is also entirely emasculated, but merely comes off as boob. That said, it’s probably all the more satisfying when the naive bumbler proves he’s not as stupid as the various parties manipulating him may think.

The ultimate fate of this character diverge in the two films — I have no idea which is more faithful to the novel — and both are appropriate and effective in their own contexts. Here Legrand finds a happy ending of a sort when finally he dispatches all who have held him down and steps well outside the confines of polite society. I’m definitely an admirer of both films; Renoir’s is immaculately composed, frequently very funny, and a wicked study of behavior and society as only he can do, and I can’t wait to further explore his 30s work.

 

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)


about
Lauren, 25, out-of-work librarian. At the moment, TLC is but a review blog and catalogue of my film-related perversions. I always plan to do more with it — and to one day step outside 30s Hollywood again. Who knows?


navigation
Films: All reviewed | Favorites
Actors: Profiles | Favorites
Directors: Profiles | Favorites
Screencap galleries
All films by year
2008 Viewing log


Screening Log
» The Great Lie 1941, Edmund Goulding
» In This Our Life 1942, John Huston
» The Crash 1932, William Dieterle
» Café Metropole 1937, Edward H Griffith
» Dodsworth 1936, William Wyler
» The Rich Are Always with Us 1932, Alfred E Green
» Lilly Turner 1933, William A Wellman
» Frisco Jenny 1932, William A Wellman
» Female 1933, Michael Curtiz
» Waterloo Bridge 1931, James Whale

Feedback
Café Metropole (1)
  • Laura: Have been enjoying catching up with your blog in recent days — your post on LILLY TURNER makes me want...
100 Favorite Films (5)
  • artgrl: great list, thank you.
The Great Lie (2)
  • Lauren: Au contraire, I love the idea of the potentials of artlessness. …And wish I had somewhere to go with...
  • Mango: Wonderful, an update. Cool spoiler device. It sounds like this strikes on the wonderful potentials artlessness...
In This Our Life (1)
  • John McElwee: I’ve just discovered you, spent the last hour reading “The Life Cinematic”, and let...

The Bookshelf
Currently reading
On the shelf
» Film library
» Complete library

links
» Allure
» Awards Daily
» Bright Lights Film Journal
» Cinemaniacal
» Cinemascope
» Cinema Talk
» Classic Cinema Online
» Collective Contemplations on Cinema
» Critical Culture
» Criticker
» Fataculture
» Film Comment
» Film Int
» Greenbriar Picture Shows
» House of Mirth & Movies
» If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger...
» Jump Cut
» Mango Grove
» Not Coming to a Theater Near You
» The Pagan Agenda
» Pop Matters
» Rants & Musings
» Reverse Shot
» Self-Styled Siren
» Senses of Cinema
» Shining a Light on the Forgotten Classics
» Sight & Sound
» Sin in Soft Focus
» TCM schedule
» They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?
» Through a Blog Darkly

Netflix
The Asphalt Jungle Under the Volcano Lifeboat The Most Dangerous Game The Good Fairy Persepolis 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days Belle Toujours 

Friend me