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Partie de campagne

  • 1946
  • Not Rated
  • 40m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
Partie de campagne (1946)
ComedyDramaRomanceShort

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.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.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.

  • Director
    • Jean Renoir
  • Writers
    • Jean Renoir
    • Guy de Maupassant
  • Stars
    • Sylvia Bataille
    • Jane Marken
    • Georges D'Arnoux
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    7.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean Renoir
    • Writers
      • Jean Renoir
      • Guy de Maupassant
    • Stars
      • Sylvia Bataille
      • Jane Marken
      • Georges D'Arnoux
    • 40User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos17

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    Top cast14

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    Sylvia Bataille
    Sylvia Bataille
    • Henriette
    Jane Marken
    Jane Marken
    • Madame Dufour
    • (as Jeanne Marken)
    Georges D'Arnoux
    • Henri
    • (as Georges Saint-Saens)
    André Gabriello
    • Monsieur Dufour
    • (as Gabriello)
    Jacques B. Brunius
    Jacques B. Brunius
    • Rodolphe
    • (as Jacques Borel)
    Paul Temps
    • Anatole
    Gabrielle Fontan
    • La grand' mère…
    Jean Renoir
    Jean Renoir
    • Père Poulain…
    Marguerite Renoir
    • La servante…
    Pierre Lestringuez
    • Un vieux curé…
    Georges Bataille
    • Seminarian
    • (uncredited)
    Jacques Becker
    Jacques Becker
    • Seminarian
    • (uncredited)
    Henri Cartier-Bresson
    • Seminarian
    • (uncredited)
    Alain Renoir
    • Boy fishing
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jean Renoir
    • Writers
      • Jean Renoir
      • Guy de Maupassant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    7.57.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8Boba_Fett1138

    A random slice of life.

    This movie is a beautiful looking one and is like a day in the life of of a family on their summer holiday on the countryside, somewhere in early 20th century France.

    The movie is filled with some unexpected contrasts and metaphors. The movie in now way can be called a formulaic one and it picks its own path with its story. This ensures that the story is both realistic as well as unexpected in parts.

    The way how the movie ends is in large contrast with the rest of the otherwise happy and cheerful beginning of the movie. It has a summer holiday look and feeling over it, in which the main characters, from the big city, are obviously enjoying the beauty and quietness of the country life. You would expect the love story to unravel as a romantic one but the romantic first encounter really doesn't go as often gets portrayed in movies. I must say that the movie is just like life and it doesn't try to bloom things. But perceptions differ, as can be also seen in the final sequence of the movie, in which the events of that one summer day in the country left a big lasting impression on the girl.

    What Jean Renoir does really well is capturing the right mood and atmosphere of the movie. Even though I obviously wasn't around in 1936, it still feels all very familiar and pleasant. Of course the movie gets helped by its country side environments, which gets captured perfectly on camera.

    Not all of the actors were real experienced professionals, which can be seen back in their performances but overall this shouldn't trouble you to much, since Jean Renoir perfectly knows to tell the story with its images and character behavior, rather than relying completely on the actor's skills.

    I wouldn't go as far as calling this Renoir's best but it's nevertheless a great, humble, realistic, honest, warm portrayal of life.

    8/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    Adampreston

    I saw this film as a child and it made a profound impression on me.

    My prep school could hardly be described as being particularly sophisticated or advanced regarding the arts but at some point I benefited from a projected showing of Renoir's Une Partie de Campagne and the beautiful, romantic, sentimental and sad imagery and story got under my skin and has remained there ever since. I probably saw it when I was nine years old and I am now thirty five. I haven't seen it since but I can still see moments and sequences clearly in my minds eye. Certainly a child is a blank canvas and liable to be more influenced by something than an adult - I am just glad that amongst all the rubbish I was exposed to, someone thought fit to show something this beautiful to me at that moment.
    10dbdumonteil

    Renoir meets Maupassant:up where they belong.

    Unfinished,this is a one of Renoir's most remarkable works.As far as Guy DE Maupassant is concerned,only Max OPhuls's "le plaisir"(1951) and Christian-Jaque's "Boule de Suif" (1950)equal it.

    This is apparently a very simple story:a couple of bourgeois (Jane Marken and Gabriello) ,their daughter (Sylvia Bataille) and her less-than-handsome husband leave for a day in the country (title).There the young girl meets love ,short-lived happiness.

    Beneath the placid surface,tragedy emerges.The beautiful landscape,the simmering water,the whispering grass,the swings which seem to reach for a pure sky,the small fish you savor in the guinguettes down by the river,the thrill of it all!The young girl's longing for true love is harder to endure in such a peaceful paradise.This is one of these rare movies in which you experiment happiness tinged with an infinite sadness.

    A whole sequence is missing:a card explains the events which were not filmed.Sylvia Bataille's last line(to the man she fell in love with) will make you cry out:"I've been thinking of it every day".Woman has always been sacrificed in Maupassant's work.At a running time of 40 minutes,a lot of people claim it for Renoir's best though.I do.Claude Renoir marvelously conveys Maupassant's depictions with his pictures.
    GManfred

    Partial

    Although "A Day In The Country" is a lovely, lyrical film I was disappointed to learn that it was never completed. Indeed, there is a gaping hole toward the end of the film which, if finished, could have answered some plot questions. And so, we must draw our own conclusions and try to fill in blanks. As you would expect, it mars the final product.

    As is, it is a snippet of life fleshed out by the master director Renoir. Human feeling seems to be his strong point, humanity in all its strengths, shortcomings and foibles as illustrated by his depiction of a family picnic in the country. We are eavesdropping on them, almost. I wish he could have finished it.
    10drunk-drunker-drunkest

    I've been thinking of it every day....

    Just how unfinished "Partie De Campagne" truly is remains something of a contentious issue. There are countless differing theories and opinions, some of which seem to have been instigated by the director himself. There are those, this reviewer included, who believe Renoir originally intended this film as one-half of a double feature of Guy De Maupassant adaptations. Whatever might have once been planned, however, does nothing to soften the radiant beauty and brilliance of the film.

    Renoir had collected around himself a group of friends and family in the hope of creating what he later described as a "holiday" atmosphere during the scheduled week of filming. In accordance with the story on which it is based, long summer days and balmy afternoons by the river banks were called for in Renoir's script. Unfortunately, the cast and crew were faced with a damp, dismal July which continued long into August. Cramped up in the lobby of the hotel, sheltering from the storms outside, personal tensions and rivalries soon inevitably surfaced. With the months continuing to pass and little to show the financial backers in the rushes, money became scarce. Eventually, after refusing Sylvia Bataille's request for leave so she might audition for a future project in Paris, the director himself nonchalantly announced he would be abandoning the film to concentrate his efforts on his next film, Les Bas-fonds.

    Considering all of the above, it is miraculous that the film we see today is such a luminous, sensual masterpiece.

    Much is made of Renoir's use of deep focus techniques in films such as Le Regle de Jeu and La Grande Illusion, quite rightly so, but it is also used to great effect in this film. The film's early scenes largely take place inside a rural inn. Renoir keeps the camera mostly in one place, stationary. Then, suddenly, a window is opened; light floods in, we see trees, a breeze blowing lightly through grass, a young woman and her mother arcing high into the summer air on swings. Now we cut to a close-up of the girl, with the camera fixed to the swing, an accomplice to her every movement. She is laughing, ecstatic, exhilarated by her surroundings. It is an exhilarating moment in cinema, the sudden infusion of life and nature into the film echoes in the viewer's mind throughout the short running time.

    Renoir is a great film-maker, perhaps the greatest of all, and this is a great film, perhaps his greatest of all.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film was shot in the summer of 1936 but was not released until 10 years later in a 40-minute, unfinished version.
    • Quotes

      Henriette: Did you feel an immense tenderness for it all... for the grass, the water, the trees? A vague sort of yearning. It starts here, then it rises. It almost makes me want to cry.

    • Connections
      Edited into Il fiore e la violenza (1962)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 21, 1948 (Argentina)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • A Day in the Country
    • Filming locations
      • Bords du Loing, Montigny-sur-Loing, Seine-et-Marne, France
    • Production company
      • Panthéon Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 40m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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