Film Review
The River, Jean Renoir's first colour film, stands
out from what is, by any standards, an extraordinary body of work, on account of its beguiling
poetic sense, sympathetic portrayal of another culture and sheer cinematographic flair.
It is the most atypical of Renoir's films - its maturity, style and texture is more evocative
of the great Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray than of the French experimentalist cineaste
Jean Renoir. The exotic location, Rumer Godden's beautifully lyrical screenplay
and Claude Renoir's stunning camerawork imbue the film with more poetry, a deeper understanding
of humanity, and a far greater spiritual dimension than we find in many of the director's
other films. Some consider this to be Jean Renoir's greatest film, and it certainly
rivals the genius of his early masterpieces such as
La Grande illusion (1937).
The idea for the film came when Jean Renoir was living in Los Angeles, after he had
already made around half a dozen films (many popular successes) for Hollywood. He
came across a novel by the English writer Rumer Godden, who is now best known for her
book “Black Narcissus”. Coincidentally it was at this time that Renoir met
Kenneth McEldowney, who had made his fortune as a florist and real estate agent.
McEldowney was determined to make a film, prompted by his wife, a publicist for MGM.
The story goes that McEldowney swore he could make a better film than his wife's company.
McEldowney's ambition was to produce a film about India, where he spent his military
service, and to that end he succeeded in getting financial support from a consortium of
wealthy Indian maharajas. Jean Renoir had already spent many futile
months trying to persuade American film producers to back his production of
The
River before he fell into the lap of Kenneth McEldowney. It was a happy conjunction
that resulted in a film that was both a critical and a commercial success, allowing Renoir
to renew his filmmaking career in Europe after his self-imposed American exile during
the war.
The River made more than 16 million
dollars and was awarded the first International Prize at the Venice Biennale in 1951.
McEldowney evidently wasn't greatly affected by what he had achieved; he went straight
back in to real estate, happy to have made his point.
For any film producer,
The
River would have been a daunting project, but McEldowney's inexperience hardly
shows. Famously the first film to have been shot entirely in India in Technicolor,
the scale of the undertaking is apparent in the end result - sumptuous location sequences
quite unlike anything seen in cinema at the time. Renoir skilfully weaves documentary-style
travelogue passages (including an exquisite account of Diwali, the Hindu festival of Lights)
around the central narrative, adding not just local colour to the story but conveying
a surprising amount of detail about Indian life and culture.
Respectful references
to Hindu and Buddhist beliefs are woven into the fabric of the film, with the natural
wonder that is the River Ganges providing the central underpinning leitmotif. The
river represents life, a watercourse that flows for eternity, constantly renewing itself,
just as human souls make their slow progression from ignoble dust towards the highest
level of enlightenment - all part of the Divine's pattern of continuance and purification.
The world spins. The day ends, the end begins. Over and over.
The
Buddhist notion of rebirth and renewal is central to the film, a film that is preoccupied
for the most part with the trauma of one teenage girl's sexual awakening.
A combination of Renoir's rigorously unsentimental approach and a strikingly realistic
performance from Patricia Walters (who plays Harriet, her one and only film credit) gives
the story of a vulnerable young girl falling in love for the first time a tough realist
edge that is both truthful and charged with pathos.
Harriet's innocence and idealism
make an effective contrast with the worldly charms of her more confident elder sister
Valerie, played by another alluring ingénue, Adrienne Corri. With her flaming
red hair, alabaster skin, and seductive eyes, Corri is the embodiment of a pre-Raphaelite
nymph, particularly striking in the sequence where she taunts her lover in the lush forest.
Of the three young girls in the drama, the most knowing and perhaps the most tragic is
the beautiful half-caste Melanie, played by Radha, who has the additional burden of belonging
to two quite different cultures. Three very different characters - each suffering
the same pangs of first love and transition to womanhood, but in subtly different ways.
Stylistically,
The River may be the film
that is least recognisably the work of Jean Renoir. Yet, for anyone familiar with
the director's work it is the one film that best exemplifies his human qualities - his
compassion for other cultures, his respect and tenderness towards women, and his love
of humanity. Visually alluring and insightful in so many ways,
The
River is a great work of cinema - a sublime piece of art that rewards both the
intellect and the senses. It is a film which helps to broaden our appreciation of
the world, and which instils in the spectator a sense of wonder at the magnificence of
Creation.
More crucially,
The River is
a film which prompts us to reflect on the values of the West and the East. Whilst
most of us in the West enjoy wealth and comfort, we knowingly live in a stagnant mire
of tawdry materialism, leading empty, selfish lives that can only end in loss and oblivion.
"The River" of Jean Renoir's film offers an alternative way of living - a life that is
not a mere disconnected bubble of Self that has no value, no significance, but rather
one that is an integral part of an endless continuum of Being, one precious droplet in
the river which carries with it the human spirit, flowing on and on, forever...
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Renoir film:
Le Carrosse d'or (1953)