by bels » Mon Feb 29, 2016 8:46 am
fair enough but I'll answer your question anyway: Morel was about a single week which repeated perfectly (It was impossible to alter the events, even to move curtains from the position they were in during that week) whereas Marienbad seemed to be about situations repeating but with slight variations which yes, built towards an ending.
I feel like I wasn't paying attention during any of "The tourists'" conversations and so struggled to form an understanding of them as a social group. I think this was probably intentional? I wouldn't mind going back and trying really hard to piece something together but I feel like the unreliable narrator and limited dialogue would probably stop me making any confirmable connections. I would like to know if anyone else had any ideas about the social interactions of the tourists.
I had "worked out" what was going on on the island before the narrator managed to, I wondered if that was what was intended, or it was just that the idea of Morel's invention is just close to the zeitgeist today. Maybe at the time it was a very novel idea and would twist people? Or nah? I feel probably not.
Up until the end I was sure we would find out that the narrator himself was Morel somehow, on the run for killing all the people he recorded. I found the actual ending better than that, except I never know what's going on with southern american politics.
The idea I liked the most was that when the narrator superimposes himself on the original recording, it highlights the possibility that many of the characters were superimposed on the original recording.
Also of course liked the descriptions and dreamlike quality of many of the scenes, particularly those underneath the museum. Also found myself attracted to the idea of trapping myself in a repeat of seven days which seems like it would almost be better than actual immortality. It seems like it would be better than life in general (as long as you got the right seven days, which seems like it wouldn't be that hard)
It did make me think of PKD (what doesn't) in concept though not in execution (PKD could never string together a plot like this, or have a female character that doesn't betray everyone) The idea that life is basically the same as our world, except there's this one metaphysical invention seemed very dickian to me.
Feel like these conversations go better when someone () comes up with some prompts.