Last Year at Marienbad

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Last Year at Marienbad
Directed by Alain Resnais
Produced by Pierre Courau
Raymond Froment
Written by Alain Robbe-Grillet
Starring Delphine Seyrig
Giorgio Albertazzi
Sacha Pitoëff
Music by Francis Seyrig
Cinematography Sacha Vierny
Editing by Jasmine Chasney
Henri Colpi
Release date(s) Flag of France June 25, 1961
Flag of United States March 7, 1962
Running time 94 min
Language French
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile
Still from "L'année dernière à Marienbad"
Still from "L'année dernière à Marienbad"

L'année dernière à Marienbad (translated as Last Year in Marienbad in the UK and Last Year at Marienbad in North America) is a 1961 French movie directed by Alain Resnais, starring Delphine Seyrig, Giorgio Albertazzi, Sacha Pitoëff.

It is famous for its enigmatic narrative structure, in which truth and fiction are difficult to distinguish, and the exact temporal and spatial relationship of the events is open to question. The dream-like nature of the film has fascinated and baffled audiences and critics, some hailing it as a masterpiece, others finding it incomprehensible.

Contents

[edit] Plot

To say the film has a plot is not quite accurate. It depicts the repetitive, almost mathematical interactions of three characters and even at the end of the film, the sequence of events remains unclear. Only the relationship of the three central characters, who remain nameless, is firm.

The film is set at an elite social gathering at a chateau. It begins with a man (known only as 'X') approaches a woman (known as 'A') and asks "Didn't we meet at Marienbad last year?" The woman is non-committal and demure. "Didn't you say you would leave your husband and we would run away together?" he asks. Again, she says "No," but they continue to talk as if they perhaps had indeed made plans. When a second man (known as 'M'), who may be A's husband, approaches, the conversation ends somewhat awkwardly and the characters move on.

As the film progresses, the relationship of the characters and the sequence of events is not made clear. Instead images and events such as the conversation above are repeated several times, but in different places in the chateau and its grounds. Several sequences involve the men at the chateau passing the time with various games (such as Nim and target shooting. There are numerous tracking shots of the chateau's corridors, with ambiguous voiceovers.

[edit] Production and style

Among the notable images in the film is a scene in which two characters (and the camera) rush out of the chateau and are faced with a tableau of figures arranged in a geometric garden; although the people cast long dramatic shadows, the trees in the garden do not. The dreamlike quality of this image is reminiscent of the works of Max Ernst, Giorgio de Chirico, Yves Tanguy and Paul Delvaux.[citation needed] The effect was created by painting the shadows of the human figures onto the ground.[citation needed]

Marienbad is a town in the Czech Republic (it is not clear whether the film's setting is meant to be Marienbad or somewhere else). Resnais filmed the scenes within several different chateaus and their grounds, including the Nymphenburg Palace, Munich, Germany; he edited them together to produce a disorientating space that does not make geographical sense. Some additional footage was shot at an indoor studio.

[edit] Awards and acclaim

The film was nominated for the 1963 Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay (Alain Robbe-Grillet), and it won the Golden Lion at the 1961 Venice Film Festival. In 1963 Adonis Kyrou declared the film a total triumph in his influential Le Surréalisme au Cinéma (p.206), recognizing the ambiguous environment and obscure motives within the film as representing many of the concerns of surrealism in narrative cinema.

Less reverently, the film received an entry in The Fifty Worst Films of All Time, by Harry Medved with Randy Dreyfuss and Michael Medved.

[edit] Influence

The film's style has influenced the look of several commercials (including those in the late 1980s for Calvin Klein 's Obsession) and the music video for "To the End" by the British rock band Blur, which is a direct pastiche of the film.

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Ado Kyrou Le Surréalisme au Cinéma, (not located): Le Terrain Vague, 1963
  • Jean-Louis Leutrat, L'Année dernière à Marienbad, London: British Film Institute, 2000

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Le Passage du Rhin
Golden Lion winner
1961
Succeeded by
Ivan's Childhood
tied with Family Diary