Finally released in 1946, ten years after it was made, Jean Renoir’sPartie de campagne was hailed as an unfinished masterpiece. Since then, his masterly adaptation of a Maupassant story has grown in reputation to the point where it is now considered by many to be Renoir’s best-loved film.
On an idyllic country picnic, a young girl leaves her family and fiancé for a while, and succumbs to an all-too-brief romance. Shot on location on the banks of two small tributaries of the Seine, Renoir’s sensuous tribute to the countryside – and to the river – has seldom been surpassed.
In its bittersweet lyricism, its tenderness and poetic feel for nature, its tolerant satire of bourgeois conventions and its poignant sense of the transience of innocence and love, Partie de campagne seems to distil the essence of all that is most personal of Renoir’s art.
Extras
Restored in 2K and presented in High Definition
Archive audio commentary by film historian and critic Philip Kemp (2003)
Un tournage à la campagne (1994, 89 mins): a selection from the outtakes held at the Cinémathèque française, compiled by filmmaker Alain Fleischer as part of the celebrations of the centenary of Jean Renoir’s birth
Screen tests (1936): a selection of screen tests shot in June 1936, assembled by Claudine Kaufmann
Jean Renoir Lecture (1963): an audio recording of a lecture and Q&A given by Jean Renoir at the BFI’s National Film Theatre
**FIRST PRESSING ONLY** Illustrated booklet with new essays by Barry Nevin and Pasquale Iannone and biography of Jean Renoir by Philip Kemp