Adolfo Bioy Casares was an Argentine fiction writer, journalist, diarist, and translator. He authored ten novels and novellas, including the 126-page novella La invención de Morel or The Invention of Morel, which included an introduction by his countryman and prize-winning writer Jorge Luis Borges.
The novella won the First Municipal Prize for Literature of the City of Buenos Aires in 1941, and although it was his seventh work, Bioy Casares thought it launched his writing career.
The writer of the 1961 French New Wave film Last Year at Marienbad, Alain Robbe-Grillet, wrote an admiring but mixed review of it in Critique magazine in 1953. The first drafts of the screenplay had Hispanic names, but it eventually evolved into characters named X, A, and M in the script but never named in the bewildering film. While Robbe-Grillet denied the connection, the connections are obvious, so I suspect he was trying to avoid copyright claims. As Kirby Ferguson would say, “Everything is a remix.“
The Invention of Morel was translated into English and published by the University of Texas Press in 1964, but went out of print until reissued as a paperback in 2003 by New York Review Books Classics. There is a Kindle edition, but it is reportedly a bad scan full of errors, so I bought the paperback, which interestingly has the silent film actress Louise Brooks on the cover with her distinctive bob.
That’s because Bioy Casares was fascinated by Brooks and disillusioned by the decline of her career. She had disappeared from the screens of Buenos Aires after three or four movies, and he modeled the character of Faustine in the novel after her. Hence the desire of the director of Last Year at Marienbad to have his lead actress resemble Brooks.
The novel not only served as inspiration for Last Year at Marienbad, but also influenced the science fiction television series Lost, which featured a mysterious island and was broadcast from 2004 to 2010. In season four, a lead character is seen reading Bioy Casares’ novel.
The novel begins, in translation, with, “Today, on this island, a miracle has happened: summer came ahead of time.”
Illustration of tourists strolling past the “museum” in The Invention of Morel
Ann Manov summarized: “A group of elegant French tourists arrive in 1920s dress, like summer tourists at ‘Los Teques or Marienbad.’ Lounging around the hotel and the garden, they have the same banal conversations over and over again. One of them is an enigmatic, Gypsy-like woman sporting a bob and a headscarf. Her name is Faustine, and the fugitive follows her around the island, desperately in love. But she simply does not notice him.”
There are other mysteries, such as two suns or moons in the sky, and the tourists shivering under a hot sun, dancing in a storm, and swimming in a pool filled with rotting fish. Some of the weirdness reminded me of the children’s science fiction television series The Land of the Lost from 1974-1976.
The book explains these mysteries as effects from the titular recording and reproducing machine of Morel, who may be in love with Faustine.
One of the most memorable images from Last Year at Marienbad features a different sort of disquieting wrongness in the environment. Tourists in the formal garden stand and cast shadows, but the statues and conical shrubbery do not. This was achieved by shooting the scene at high noon with false shadows painted onto the ground.
In other scenes, the garden decorations do cast obvious shadows, heightening the dissonance.
There are also repeated changes in a hotel bedroom through the film which reflect a man’s repeated remoldings of a woman’s memories/reality into preferred forms.
The book was interesting, although I would disagree with Jorge Luis Borges’ claim that it is perfect. I liked a throwaway line in which the narrator shared his plan to write a book to enshrine the memory of a man who had assisted him, declaring that the memory of men is the probable location of heaven. I liked that concept: after all, a fellow had just been “resurrected” in my mind 80 years onward, thanks to the novella.
And with that, I close out this first series of Tangents. A music video of an old English pop song to a French New Wave movie to an acerbic Kansan actress in German silent films to an ancient mathematical game to an 85-year-old Argentine novella. What am I going to do when I retire? You have a partial answer.
True to form, the obscure film did not provide the name of the game, but the principles were clear enough:
The game might have originated in China and some say it resembles 捡石子 or “picking stones” while the earliest European references are reportedly from five centuries ago. Charles L. Bouton of Harvard gave it the name of Nim, and he developed the complete theory of the game in 1901. In the film, it is played as a misère game where the player with the last game piece loses, but many variants are possible.
Throughout the movie, Nim is played with cards, matchsticks, chips, dominos, and at least set up for play with photographs. You can play it here.
The 1940 Nimatron
Martin Gardner wrote about Nim in his Mathematical Games column in the February 1958 issue of Scientific American, illustrating how binary math could determine how to play a perfect game. Edward Condon, who later would be better known for his leadership of a committee explaining away UFOs, co-invented an electromechanical machine consisting of 116 relays, over two miles of copper wire, weighing over 2,200 pounds, that could play Nim: the Nimatron.
Westinghouse Electric built the device, which played 100,000 games at the New York World’s Fair in 1940, winning 90,000 of them. Condon deliberately introduced delays in its computations to avoid discouraging human players, and it was only programmed with a certain number of predetermined games to allow humans a chance to beat it. Most of the losses were to attendants who had learned how to beat the machine in order to discredit complaints that the machine was unbeatable.
Condon designed the Nimatron merely for amusement, failing to recognize the potential of his patent for it that described an internal representation of numbers, a concept that would be critical in the forthcoming computer revolution.
I earned straight A’s in all of my math classes, making it through all the semesters of calculus and ordinary and partial differential equations in college and only narrowly avoiding a minor in mathematics. However, math was anything but my easiest or favorite subject. For me, it was always a means to an end, and I can’t feign enough interest in Nim to master its theory.
Similarly, I’m not motivated to try to “solve” Last Year at Marienbad, which was deliberately left open to multiple solutions. In the film, the “husband” of the female lead instigates the game plays, and he always wins. It is clear that his various opponents, including the man gaslighting the woman, do not know the winning strategy. They fumble around, while he knows all the outcomes in advance.
The ending of the movie leaves you wondering if he did not also already know the predetermined loss of the woman. Is the hotel purgatory and the “husband” a representation of death? Perhaps his inherent inevitability explains his remark, “Oh, I can lose, but I always win.”
Or is his apparent loss at the end actually a win? Is he playing a misère game with the woman as the final game piece? There are no solutions, no answers. As Roger Ebert said, “Answers are a form of defeat.”
Another aspect of the film that aroused my curiosity was what influenced its writing and execution. The homage to Louise Brooks is explained by the revival of interest in her silent film career among French critics in the mid-1950s. However, that is purely surface. A greater literary influence, something one should always look for in a Left Bank film, was an Argentine science fiction novella of 1940, the final Tangent in this series.
This is the third of five snowed-in posts, illustrating the pathways I sometimes pursue due to my avid curiosity. This Tangent began with a video remix of an old song by Duran Duran, which had inserts from a French New Wave film from 1961, which had echoes of a failed star of the silent screen who grew up just 40 miles from our home in Bartlesville.
In Last Year at Marienbad, director Alain Resnais wanted Delphine Seyrig’s appearance to resemble that of Louise Brooks in 1929’s Pandora’s Box. Alas, Delphine showed up for filming with a haircut that would not allow for the recreation of Brooks’ Lulu bob. A wedge cut was utilized instead, and that became a phenomenon as well.
Louise Brooks with her Lulu bob in Pandora’s Box of 1929 and Delphine Seyrig with her wedge cut in Last Year at Marienbad of 1961
Louise Brooks
Louise Brooks in Pandora’s Box
I’ve never seen Brooks’ films, but her look is iconic, and she eventually became a powerful essayist on Old Hollywood. She memorably shared, “If I ever bore you, it’ll be with a knife.”
Louise was born in 1906 in Cherryvale, Kansas, just 40 miles from my home in Bartlesville. Her father was a lawyer and her mother was cultured, participating in Chautauquas and playing Debussy and Ravel on the piano for her children.
However, Louise was sexually abused by a neighbor when she was nine years old. She shared, “We were Midwesterners born in the Bible Belt of Anglo-Saxon farmers, who prayed in the parlor and practiced incest in the barn.”
The family moved to Independence when she was 13, and then on to Wichita. She regularly performed as a dancer across southeastern Kansas and left for New York, and at age 18 she was signed to a five-year film contract with Paramount. Although she only appeared in a couple dozen movies between 1925 and 1938, starring in only three of them, her bobbed black helmet of hair was a style icon, and I already knew of her sharp wit.
If I ever bore you, it’ll be with a knife.
Louise Brooks
Brooks led a wild existence with plenty of drinking and sex. After two highly regarded German films, she returned to Hollywood in 1930, where her independent spirit, rebellious nature, and outspokenness clashed with studio executives. Her career faded, and she eventually returned to Kansas, where “the citizens of Wichita either resented me having been a success or despised me for being a failure”. She then fled to New York to star as a radio actor in soap operas and failed. She became a gossip columnist and was fired. She became a salesgirl at Saks, and finally fell into prostitution from 1948 to 1953.
She began an autobiography, Naked on My Goat. The title was from a young witch’s lines in Goethe’s Faust, who displays her youthful beauty and confidence while another witch warns that eventually she is bound to rot. However, after working on it for three years, she threw the manuscript into an incinerator. Her drinking increased and she considered suicide. Brooks would later share that despite two marriages and numerous affairs, she had never loved anyone.
The French saved Louise. Henri Langlois and others rediscovered her films and, at age 51, she was the subject of a film festival. The curator of film at the George Eastman House in Rochester learned how the former film star was living as a recluse in NYC and persuaded her to move into a tiny apartment nearby. She agreed to watch films, including some of her own which she had never seen, and launched a new career writing essays for film magazines.
The talented yet tragic Louise Brooks
Once derided as a brainy showgirl, Brooks proved to be an articulate and acerbic writer. Her revived notoriety helped inspire director Resnais to model his 1961 film’s star after her classic appearance, all the more since the movie was influenced by a 1940 novella whose author had Brooks in mind for its main female character.
Sight and Sound shared, “If Brooks has an Achilles heel, it is her own intelligence: she tends to attribute to others as much self-awareness and analytical power as she has herself.”
Film Comment‘s take on her work was, “It is also an exhilarating display of the sort of diamond-hard prose whose beauty is inseparable from its precision.”
All that led me to order her only book, Lulu in Hollywood, with eight of her essays. It wasn’t available electronically, so I ordered a splendid print version that the University of Minnesota Press published in 2000 which included a famous profile of her by Kenneth Tynan.
In one of her last essays, Brooks explained why she had not written her full memoir: “I am unwilling to write the sexual truth that would make my life worth reading. I cannot unbuckle the Bible Belt.”
Louise died at age 78 in Rochester, having always thought of herself as a failure. Late in her life, she wrote to her brother: “I have been taking stock of my 50 years since I left Wichita in 1922 at the age of 15 to become a dancer with Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn. How I have existed fills me with horror. For I have failed in everything — spelling, arithmetic, riding, swimming, tennis, golf, dancing, singing, acting, wife, mistress, whore, friend. Even cooking. And I do not excuse myself with the usual escape of ‘not trying.’ I tried with all my heart.”
Last Year at Marienbad birthed multiple Tangents, including the ancient game of Nim, which I shall explore in Tangent A4.
This is the second of five snowed-in posts, illustrating the pathways I sometimes pursue due to my avid curiosity. This Tangent began with a video remix of an old song by Duran Duran, which had inserts from a French New Wave film from 1961.
Here’s the video that instigated this Tangent:
French New Wave
One of the original posters highlights the disturbing
In my younger days, I would occasionally skim issues of the French film magazine Cahiers du Cinéma at public libraries, although my French was limited to a few weeks in fifth grade and its descent from Latin, which I studied for a few years in high school and college. Thus I thought of the magazine’s title as Cashiers rather than Cahiers since I was unfamiliar with the French word for notebooks. I enjoyed seeing retrospectives on the work of auteurs like Truffaut, Godard, and Demy, and I have seen Truffaut’s Fahrenheit 451 of 1966, Godard’s Alphaville of 1965, and I have a Blu-Ray of Demy’s The Umbrellas of Cherbourg of 1964 that I’m saving as a post-retirement treat. The sumptuous yet strange visuals in the music video reminded me of that era when French directors rejected traditional filmmaking conventions.
Cahiers promoted the work of “Right Bank” filmmakers, who were primarily film critics with cinephile backgrounds. However, there were also slightly older “Left Bank” filmmakers who often came from literary, documentary, or other arts backgrounds. While Godard and Truffaut might focus on formal experimentation like jump cuts, the Left Bank integrated other art forms and had more overtly political, literary, and intellectual themes. The latter were associated with the intellectual and bohemian “Rive Gauche” or “Left Bank” of Paris.
Last Year at Marienbad
A Google Lens search identified the female protagonist as actress Delphine Seyrig in director Alain Resnais’ 1961 film L’Année dernière à Marienbad or Last Year at Marienbad. So the video was remixing with a Left Bank film. I was familiar with that group’s La Jetée by Chris Marker, which inspired one of my favorite films, 12 Monkeys, but I’d never heard of Marienbad.
Coco Chanel
Coco Chanel in 1963
The beautiful gowns that Seyrig wore in the film were immediately arresting. I presumed they were by a French designer, but I was surprised to learn that Coco Chanel was responsible, albeit uncredited in the film. You see, Chanel had met Hollywood mogul Samuel Goldwyn at Monte Carlo way back in 1931, and he had paid her a million dollars to come to Hollywood a couple of times per year to design costumes for his films. Chanel came to dislike the culture of the film world and only worked on a few films there, declaring, “Hollywood is the capital of bad taste … and it is vulgar.”
Hence I didn’t expect to see her designing costumes for a Left Bank film decades later. However, Director Alain Resnais admired Chanel’s timeless style and asked her to do the film’s costumes when she was 77 years old. Resnais and screenwriter Alain Robbe-Grillet wanted 1920s glamour blended with 1960s modernity, and Chanel’s clean lines, little black dresses, and use of chiffon and tulle were well-suited to the film’s black-and-white cinematography.
“I should have shown you set among white feathers…a sea of white feathers about your body.”
Writer Alain Robbe-Grillet and director Alain Resnais collaborated on the film, with Robbe-Grillet writing a detailed screenplay that went beyond dialogue, gestures, and décor to include the placement and movement of the camera and the sequencing of shots.
Robbe-Grillet’s preface to the story shared: “The whole film is in fact the story of a persuasion, what is involved is a reality that the hero creates by his own vision, through his own words. [. . .] It all takes place in a luxury hotel, a sort of international palace.[. . .] An unnamed man goes from room to room [. . .], walks down interminable corridors. [. . .] His glance moves from one nameless face to another nameless face. But it always comes back to one face, that of a certain young woman. [. . .] To her, then, he offers [. . .] a past, a future, freedom. He tells her that they have already met, a year ago, that they became lovers, that he has returned now to this rendezvous which she herself had made, and that he will take her away with him.”
“She does not wish to leave the other man [. . .] who watches over her and who is perhaps her husband. But the story told by the stranger becomes more and more real; irresistibly, it becomes more and more true. The present and the past have, besides, finally become fused, while the growing tension among the three protagonists creates in the mind of the heroine tragic phantasms: rape, murder, suicide. . . .”
Resnais filmed that script with great fidelity, although there are inevitable differences. The most notable of those is that Resnais was not interested in filming the rape, instead emphasizing the hero’s rejection of that scenario, agitatedly reformulating it into a willing and welcome embrace. However, in the repeated overexposed tracking shots moving toward the smiling woman of that reformulation, her strange smile and the tilting of her head are simultaneously comical and disturbing — deliberate off-putting choices.
The conclusion is a sudden linear narrative of the woman accepting the hero’s narrative, finally being willing to “go away with him, toward something […], love, poetry, freedom … or, perhaps, death.”
The Critics
I resisted watching Last Year at Marienbad for some time, even though it was clearly gorgeous, because I fully expected it to be difficult, obscurantist, and pretentious given its Left Bank origin. I dislike and often disagree with New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael, but her caustic take on the film no doubt has elements of truth:
Here we are, back at the no-fun party with non-people, in what is described to us as an “enormous, luxurious, baroque, lugubrious hotel — where corridors succeed endless corridors.” I can scarcely quote even that much of the thick malted prose without wanting to interject — “Oh, come off it.” The mood is set by climaxes of organ music and this distended narration; it’s all solemn and expectant — like High Mass. But then you hear the heroine’s thin little voice, and the reiterated questions and answers, and you feel you shouldn’t giggle at High Mass, even if it’s turning into a game of Idiot’s Delight.
However, my tastes often aligned with Roger Ebert, and he recalled standing in the rain in college to see the film, and remembered it more fondly.
Yes, it’s easy to smile at Alain Resnais’ 1961 film, which inspired so much satire and yet made such a lasting impression. Incredible to think that students actually did stand in the rain to be baffled by it, and then to argue for hours about its meaning–even though the director claimed it had none.
…
Viewing the film again, I expected to have a cerebral experience, to see a film more fun to talk about than to watch. What I was not prepared for was the voluptuous quality of “Marienbad,” its command of tone and mood, its hypnotic way of drawing us into its puzzle, its austere visual beauty. Yes, it involves a story that remains a mystery, even to the characters themselves. But one would not want to know the answer to this mystery. Storybooks with happy endings are for children. Adults know that stories keep on unfolding, repeating, turning back on themselves, on and on until that end that no story can evade.
Ebert recalled sitting over coffee in the student union with Gunther Marx, a professor of German, after seeing the film for the first time. Marx told him, “It is a working out of the anthropological archetypes of Claude Levi-Strauss. You have the lover, the loved one, and the authority figure. The movie proposes that the lovers had an affair, that they didn’t, that they met before, that they didn’t, that the authority figure knew it, that he didn’t, that he killed her, that he didn’t. Any questions?”
I could hug Roger for his addition: “I sipped my coffee and nodded thoughtfully. This was deep. I never subsequently read a single word by Levi-Strauss, but you see I have not forgotten the name. I have no idea if Marx was right. The idea, I think, is that life is like this movie: No matter how many theories you apply to it, life presses on indifferently toward its own inscrutable ends. The fun is in asking questions. Answers are a form of defeat.”
You are so difficult!
Difficult films are hit-and-miss for me. I like much of David Lynch’s work, including the nonlinear Lost Highwayand the puzzle box of Mulholland Drive, but I couldn’t make it through Inland Empire. I tried to watch Terence Malick’s Tree of Life, but it desperately needed pruning.
The Amazon Prime Kino Film thumbnail that caught my eye
So, given my reluctance, how did I come to watch Last Year at Marienbad? Well, several months ago I purchased a new 4K HDR release of Danger: Diabolik from Kino Lorber, which had been the subject of an episode of the Perf Damage podcast with Charlotte Barker, Paramount’s Director of Film Restoration, and her husband, Adam. I might guess that influenced the algorithms crafting my online experiences to promote Kino Lorber’s products on Amazon Prime. Thus, when I opened the Prime Video app on my iPad to seek entertainment, it offered up the Kino Film Collection. A bit of idle side-scrolling then brought the thumbnail of the film into view. I could watch it for free, so long as I remembered to cancel a 7-day free trial of the sub-service. Hmmm…why not?
So I watched this difficult and beautiful film in bed on a little 10.9″ screen at about 2K resolution while wearing a bone conduction headset with mediocre sound quality. How fitting for these times, and thank goodness for subtitles.
The film was indeed exasperating, fascinating, foolish, disturbing. There was obviously intercutting in the editing between multiple scenes, without clear signals of past versus present except occasional revealing dialogue. Deliberate mismatches of dialogue and visual descriptions accompanied shifting, inconsistent realities that reminded me of several of David Lynch’s later films. I didn’t find the film profound, as it seemed mostly only surviving surfaces of a plot that had been eviscerated, but it tickled my curiosity in multiple ways.
Firstly, what was so familiar about Delphine Seyrig’s appearance? The film’s obvious choices to have many characters arranged in motionless and stilted tableaus, the dated play-within-the-film, and the cinematography all seemed to pay homage to silent films. Sure enough, director Resnais had unsuccessfully tried to get Kodak to supply old-fashioned film stock that would bloom and halo like in the old silents, and he wanted Seyrig’s appearance and manner to resemble that of Louise Brooks in 1929’s Pandora’s Box. Thus we turn to follow Tangent A3.
We’re likely to be snowed in for several days, so in hopes of entertaining some other snowbound folks, this is the first of five daily releases on some tangents I followed when I stumbled onto something with rich connections. Tangent A1 will be followed by A2 through A5.
Give people facts and you feed their minds for an hour. Awaken curiosity and they feed their own minds for a lifetime.
Back in 1985, I discovered James Burke, the British science historian, author, and television producer, through his series The Day the Universe Changed that came to Public Broadcasting. Burke had long rejected the conventional linear view of historical progress, contending that our world is the product of a web of interconnected and isolated events, driven by personal motivations, occurring with no conception of the modern results. The series struck a nerve with me, and I incorporated episodes of it into my physics teaching, continuing to show my students at least part of the fifth episode, Infinitely Reasonable, for decades. Burke’s earlier series, Connections, was less linear and led to five additional follow-ups, the most recent being Connections with James Burke in 2023 via CuriosityStream.
I enjoy adapting Burke’s ping-pong methodology to my own entertainment and edification. I call these posts Tangents because they needn’t feature any through-line, simply reflecting connections that captured my interest. My personality profile ranks me at the 93rd percentile in Openness, so I’m as curious as a cat and happily careen from one topic to another.
This first series will detail (of course! relentlessly) how a mere music video triggered my insatiable curiosity, leading me to watch a French New Wave film, pursue essays by a failed star of silent films, explore combinatorial mathematics, and read an 85-year-old Argentine science fiction novella.
The Instigating Video
It all began months ago when the YouTube algorithm coughed up The Blue Ball Music‘s video of Greek DJ and producer Dim Zach‘s remix of Duran Duran’s 1993 song Come Undone.
Duran Duran in 1984
I first encountered Duran Duran, an English pop rock band, on MTV in the 1980s. In that bygone era, if I wanted to listen to my favorite songs in my car, I had to create a mix cassette tape from vinyl record long-playing albums or 45-rpm singles.
In 1982 I saved a bit of money by purchasing The Beat, a K-Tel compilation vinyl album. That got me 14 songs at one fell swoop. Among them was Duran Duran’s Girls on Film, but I didn’t care for it, much preferring We Got the Beat by the Go-Go’s, I Ran (So Far Away)by A Flock of Seagulls, and I Want Candy by Bow Wow Wow.
Ah, youth. I don’t listen to any of those songs anymore, although I do still love the Go-Go’s Our Lips Are Sealed.
Duran Duran aboard the 1936 Fife yacht Eilean
I kept seeing Duran Duran’s Hungry Like the Wolf on MTV, but I thought most of their videos were cheesy. Their best video to me was Rio by Russell Mulcahy with the band in Antony Price silk suits aboard a yacht sailing near Antigua.
Roger Moore was far past his prime by A View to a Kill; I couldn’t imagine him listening to Duran Duran
The group was misnamed after the villain Dr. Durand Durand of the rather baked movie Barbarella, which was based on a French science fiction comic book. One of the band’s founding members saw the 1968 film when it was broadcast on the BBC on October 20, 1978, and sold the others on using the name, although it is unclear if they realized it was misspelled. There already was a famed night club and music venue in Birmingham named Barbarella’s, so that may have been a factor, although the band didn’t perform there until June 1, 1979.
The comic book led to Jane Fonda as Barbarella being tortured by Milo O’Shea’s Dr. Durand Durand
Music videos were instrumental in the band’s eventual success, but I had stopped watching those long before 1993 when their original video for Come Undone was released, featuring colorful footage in the London Aquarium. However, I did manage to hear and enjoy the song back in the day, although as with many songs, I can only reproduce bits and snatches of the lyrics, and I had no grasp of its meaning; many vocals blend into the wall of sound for me. Vocalist Simon Le Bon wrote the lyrics as a birthday gift to his wife Yasmin, which is why it includes the line, “‘Happy Birthday to you’ was created for ya”. The song was the band’s last top-40 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
When I saw this video remix, it was drastically different from what I would have expected from the group, with black-and-white footage that seemed to come from some vintage film, which I deduced was likely French New Wave.
And thus I took off on Tangent A2…to the Left Bank in Paris.