Every Revolution Is a Throw of the Dice (1977)
A tribute to Mallarmé that not only asserts the continuing relevance of his work but also confronts its literary ambiguities with political and cinematic ambiguities of its own. In outline, the film could not be more straightforward: it offers a recitation of one of Mallarmé’s most celebrated and complex poems (it was his last published work in his own lifetime, appearing in 1897, a year before his death) and proposes a cinematic equivalent for the author’s original experiment with typography and layout by assigning the words to nine different speakers, separating each speaker from the other as she or he speaks, and using slight pauses to correspond with white spaces on the original page.
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Good story, Not enough for a whole film
Good movie, but best of all time? Hardly . . .
For all the hype it got I was expecting a lot more!
Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.