Eine Landpartie (Short 1946)

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Eine Landpartie: Directed by Jean Renoir. With Sylvia Bataille, Georges D’Arnoux, Jane Marken, André Gabriello. The family of a Parisian shop-owner spends a day in the country. The daughter falls in love with a man at the inn, where they spend the day.

“Day in the Country, A (1936) u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003e**** (out of 4) u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIncredibly touching and extremely beautiful film from the French master Renoir. A Parisian father takes his wife, mother-in-law, daughter and future son in law on a trip to the country where they plan to have a picnic. While the men fish two gentlemen with not-so-innocent plans take the women on a canoe ride. Iu0026#39;ve been looking to see this film for quite sometime even though the reviews Iu0026#39;ve read have been rather mixed. I personally found this film to be incredibly beautiful and Iu0026#39;d probably put it as the greatest French film Iu0026#39;ve seen. The peacefulness of the country that Renoir brings to the screen is quite breathtaking and he really does capture the freeness of being out in the middle of no where surrounding by silence. I thought all of the characters were very well written and the dialogue suited each of them perfectly. A lot of times all the characters sound the same but I was very please to see how different each of them were. The film runs a very short 40-minutes but Renoir throws everything into the picture. This includes terrific laughs and some very heartfelt moments towards the end of the movie. The film also features some very beautiful cinematography including a terrific sequence near the end where the river is shown with rain drops hitting it. Another great sequence comes early on when the two men are inside the diner and push the window open to reveal whatu0026#39;s outside. This scene works even better thanks in large part to the terrific score by Joseph Kosma. All of the performances are great but Sylvia Bataille is the real standout as the daughter who is going to encounter and lose love over the span of a short evening. Jacques Borel is also worth mentioning as the womanizer who adds a lot of the comedy to the film. Iu0026#39;ve heard various stories about the short running time. It seems Renoir never go to finish the film but to me the running time is perfect and itu0026#39;s amazing what the director does capture and show in the short time.”

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