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River, The
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12 DVDs for Christmas 2009
Certificate
1951
Colour
France, India, USA
Language(s): English
Subtitles: English for the hearing impaired
Published/distributed by BFI
ISBN/EAN: 5035673006191
Ratio 1.33:1
Region 2
Price: £19.56
(Including VAT at 15%)
<back
River, The
Renoir, Jean
Winner of the International Prize at Cannes in 1951.
Following its theatrical re-release at the NFT in February 2006, BFI Video releases on DVD a new, high-definition digital transfer of The River in its original aspect ratio. The DVD is mastered from the film restoration by the Academy Film Archive, which was carried out in association with the BFI and Janus Films.
Jean Renoir's intoxicating first colour feature - shot entirely on location in India - is an adaptation of Rumer Godden's autobiographical coming-of-age tale of an adolescent girl living with her English family on the banks of the Ganges during the waning years of British colonial life.
Exquisitely shot in luminous Technicolor by Renoir's nephew Claude, The River is a visual tour de force and a glorious, meditative tribute to the sights and sounds of Indian culture.
Its central character (and the film's narrator) is fourteen-year-old Harriet (Patricia Walters), the eldest of five children. Harriet and her beautiful, slightly older friend Valerie (Adrienne Corri) experience the intensity of first love when Captain John (Thomas E. Breen) comes to stay with their neighbours, a mixed-race family with a daughter, Melanie (Radha), of similar age. Captain John, who has lost a leg in active service, captivates the three teenagers, each of whom develops romantic feelings towards this heroic and enigmatic young man.
Perhaps Renoir's most symbolic and spiritual film, displaying great humanity and refreshing simplicity, The River received tremendous international acclaim and remains one of his most popular films.
Extras
* Specially commissioned filmed introduction to The River by Indian filmmaker Kumar Shahani
* Seven rarely-seen short films set in India (1899-1945), preserved in the BFI National Archive. Among them are two silent films showing the changes in jute production and two 1930s films photographed in Technicolor by British cinematographer Jack Cardiff
* Fully illustrated 24-page booklet including film essay and Rumer Godden interview by David Thompson; director biography and notes on the seven short films
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