Smiles of a Summer Night is a film that often gets mentioned alongside Rules of the Game, and understandably so, given its subject matter, but I'm not sure there's any connection besides shared antecedents in classical theater - Beaumarchais and the like. What do you see in Bergman's version of "weekend in the country" that compares with Renoir's? Does anyone know if Bergman had seen Rules of the Game by 1955? It wasn't often screened prior to its restoration in 1959, and Bergman wasn't as avid a cinemaphile as some other directors.Magic Hate Ball wrote:It's obvious that it inspired more than a few films (Smiles of a Summer Night,
I too spent a long time filing them together in my mind (I first saw both of them and also Bunuel's Diary of a Chambermaid during the same summer when I was in high school and for a while couldn't remember which scenes were in which movie), but the more I see them, the less they seem to have in common, either in style or in content.

