L'invention de Morel (TV Movie 1967) Poster

(1967 TV Movie)

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8/10
Slow, cool, but meaningful
sansay7 July 2013
A man called Luis, while attempting to escape capture by authorities, gets shipwrecked on a deserted island. He discovers some buildings abandoned long ago. But suddenly people appear on the island, coming to settle down in the buildings, scaring Luis into hiding. After a while Luis gets more daring and tries to find out what is happening.

This movie is the French interpretation of the 1940 prize winning book "La invención de Morel" by Argentinian writer Adolfo Bioy Casares. Since I haven't read the book (yet) I cannot tell you if it is faithful. However the description on Wikipedia seems pretty close.

Although the development is a bit slow it pays to be patient. "L'invention de Morel" is a story of love, and the frequent pair of genius and madness. It's also a philosophical essay on death and immortality. The story progresses as the man shipwrecked on the island discovers what is behind all the strange events he's observing. We follow him step by step as he unravels the mysteries of the island. Most of the film evolves through the voice over of Luis as he writes a journal. This is at the source of an aloofness that keeps all your emotions at bay. The absence of music, except the one brought by the visitors, also contributes to this feeling of detachment. However, what matters most is what Morel did. And this is what will keep coming back in your thoughts later.

Luis' final actions left me quite puzzled. To such a Cartesian mind as mine, it made no sense. But perhaps if you are left alone long enough on a deserted island and there is not even a remote chance of returning to civilization, perhaps then, one might decide that this is the best outcome.
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9/10
the kingdom of the shades
myriamlenys23 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
With the aid of some friends, Luis has fled both persecution and imprisonment. Now the solitary inhabitant of a forgotten island, he spends much of his time writing a diary and exploring his new environment. He also likes poking around a ruined villa which must have been the elegant dwelling of a very rich man. His routine is disturbed by the sudden arrival of a group of well-heeled and carefree people...

Quite a good fantasy/science fiction movie on a very original premise. Layered and complex, it is many things : an examination of the corrosive nature of loneliness, an unconventional love story, a condemnation of the futility and sterility of hedonism, a description of the ravages of erotic obsession, a philosophical or even religious discussion about the battle between "maya" and reality. But first and foremost it seems to be a meditation on the double-edged sword that is cinema, which safeguards, immortalizes and resuscitates while robbing, tricking, aping and neutering.

The end is striking and will give rise to many a discussion : has Luis found hell, heaven, a blend of the two or even something else entirely ?

Protagonists Alain Saury (as Luis) and Juliette Mills (as Faustine) both do very well - and they make a very handsome couple. (Or perhaps non-couple... ?) And the villa is indeed charming and hideous at the same time, as are its partying inhabitants.

If you like some of the themes being explored, you might want to watch the very British "The stone tape", in the horror genre, or the German "World on a wire", in the fantasy/science fiction genre. Beware, "The stone tape" requires excellent nerves...
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