Finally out on video, I got to watch this seven years after seeing Out 1 in theaters.

Rosenbaum calls the two films “radically different,” but to me, it often felt simply like a shorter version of Out 1. Of course, having seen the longer version, I can’t help noticing major differences. The two theater groups’ rehearsal footage is almost entirely gone. Renaud’s disappearance with Quentin’s money is obliquely shown, and the ensuing city-wide hunt for him is even more obliquely included, in the form of black-and-white stills from those scenes inserted between regular scenes, accompanied by a low buzzing noise. There are other appearances of stills, some from deleted scenes from the longer version, sometimes callbacks or flash-forwards to scenes within Spectre.

Admittedly the 13 group felt like a much bigger deal in Spectre, more of a central conspiracy to the film, and I was able to follow the relationships and stories of offscreen characters Pierre and Igor much better, but I can’t tell if they’re really more sharply in focus in Spectre than Out 1, or if during Out 1 itself I was too busy trying to keep the many onscreen characters straight to follow much Igor drama. But looking through articles I quoted in my original Out 1 writeup, Rosenbaum said Out 1 was shaped by “the successive building and shattering of utopian dreams” and Lim says it “devotes its second half to fracture and dissolution,” and that theme and structure didn’t feel as true of Spectre.

The buzzing stills interrupt and fragment primary scenes, and there appears to be more cross-cutting between scenes than in the long version. Conversations sometimes cut off in the middle and never return. The stills appear in greater frequency at times, and disappear for long stretches at others – for instance, when Thomas first visits Sarah at the beach house and convinces her to return to Paris, the whole scene with its long shots plays out without interruption. Sometimes the editing is telling different stories than the dialogue – when Rohmer’s Balzac scholar says “secret societies,” it cuts to the Prometheus group, not returning to Rohmer for a long while.

Obade is far, an 8-hour drive southeast from Paris

Rivette:

They aren’t single frames, but simply production stills. When we tried a shorter version, our first montage ran five and a half hours. Then to make a commercially feasible length, we used the stills to tighten the editing, much the way that Jean-Luc uses titles more and more in his films, as in La Chinoise. Every time there was an editing problem he had recourse to a title. But finally we spent more time on these photos than on anything else, because there were a priori so many possibilities. We wanted the relation between the film and the stills to be neither too close nor too distant, so it was very difficult to find just the right solution. Then we added the sound to the stills. They didn’t work without sound, because the silences interrupted either noises that were very loud or others that were just murmurs. Silence didn’t produce the effect we wanted. I wanted something purely artificial: what we have is just a meaningless frequency, as if produced by a machine, which interrupts the fiction — sometimes sending messages to it, sometimes in relation to what we’ve already seen or are going to see, and sometimes with no relation at all. Because there are stills from scenes, especially toward the end, which don’t appear in the body of the film and are frankly quite incomprehensible.

Hand-off:

At the halfway point, after Colin, Frederique and Emilie/Pauline just appeared in the same scene, it lets loose with a whole montage of the buzzy stills. When Rivette says “there is a moment, one single shot even, in which almost all the fictions intersect, as if all these lines had to pass through a ring. This shot we put squarely in the middle: it comes just before the intermission,” is this the scene he means? There was no intermission in the DVD version, but it seems likely.

Ten of the 13: Thomas, Lili, Sarah, Pauline, Lucie (legal advisor), Warok, Etienne (chess player), The Ethnologist, Igor (never seen), Pierre (never seen). Four more whom I suspect: Elaine (because she discusses Lili’s disappearance with Lucie), Marie (because she gives Colin the letters), Iris (because Pauline speaks freely about Igor and her blackmail plot in front of her) and Georges (unseen character I mentioned in my Out 1 writeup, though I can’t recall who he is).

But let’s not read too much into the conspiracy. Rivette again:

In Out, I was already more careful, because the idea of the “thirteen” came rather late. For a long time we thought that the characters might never meet; perhaps there would be five or six completely different stories. We just didn’t know. Still, I had the idea that something should bring them together, and so it was Histoire des treize. But it was just a mechanism. In Paris and, even more, in Out, I don’t take the whole idea of the search for meaning seriously. It was a convenience to bring about the meetings, but it didn’t work with either film, because they were taken to be films about a search. I tried and failed to make people understand, as the film progressed, that this search led to nothing: at the end of Paris, we discover that the Organization doesn’t exist; and the more Out progresses, the more evident it becomes that this new organization of the thirteen which appeared to have been formed never really existed. There had only been a few vague conversations between completely idealistic characters without any real social or political roots. In each case there was a first part where we assembled a story of a search, and a second part where little by little we wiped it out… When I decided to use Histoire des treize, it was as a critique of Paris, which tried to show more clearly the vanity of this kind of utopian group, hoping to dominate society. It begins by being fascinating and tempting, but in the course of the film comes to be seen as futile.

equipage equipage equipage equipage equipage equipage equipage:

“Listen baby, I’m not Marlon. Marlon is on the waterfront.”

Lili and Pauline are somehow connected in running the shop (which advertises Bob Dylan bootlegs for sale in the window), and Sarah sneaks in and out. I thought Sarah was hanging out in the basement, but when they knock out Lorenzo’s man and drag him downstairs, it doesn’t look like much of a place to spend time. Lili is later said to have stolen a million francs and disappeared – but from Lorenzo or from the cases full of important-looking papers beneath the shop, I’m not positive.

Both theater groups begin with “rehearsals” that seem more like acting warm-up activities, then into vague explorations of theme and character. Each group gets a shot in the arm from the entry of a new member – Sarah to Prometheus and Renaud to Thebes. But Renaud’s ideas don’t work for Lili, and she begins to retreat from the group. In the end, both groups have dissolved because their most recent members have left, followed soon by leaders Lili and Thomas to Obade.

More important differences in the ending: Thomas doesn’t have his beachside breakdown, and Frederique doesn’t die (not sure that she even meets Renaud).

Shortly before Pauline’s lover Igor reappears (in the form of a phone call to the beach house), this maybe-strangely-translated conversation – Lili: “Why do you imagine Igor’s in a room here?” Pauline: “Imagine someone is a half, or a full year trapped in a house. No one notices. In the basement, on the floor, in a room.” Lili: “But this is a dream.” Then they agree to search the house for him, but there’s one section to which nobody has the key, and later when the key mysteriously appears, Pauline searches the unoccupied rooms beyond, staring into the infinite mirror. I find this piece of the film interesting since Bulle Ogier (Pauline) would appear in Rivette’s next film as a ghost trapped within a dream house.

Rosenbaum: “The coded messages Leaud intercepts are significantly different in the two films.” Different how? Also: “Much as Thomas Pynchon in Gravity’s Rainbow bears witness to mid-century paranoia by turning imaginary plots into real ones and vice versa, Rivette has a chilling way of both suggesting explanations and dispersing them in this monumental, maddening epic.”

Rivette:

There are some sequences which I think are failures, but after a certain number of hours, the whole idea of success and failure ceases to have any significance. Some things that I couldn’t use in Spectre are all right in the longer version. The whole actor-spectator relationship is totally different in Out, because there the actors are much more actors than characters. There are many more scenes where the sense of improvisation is much stronger, even to the point of admitting lapses, hesitations, and repetitions. There are some of these in Spectre, but relatively few, because we treated it much more as a fiction about certain characters. In the longer version, the dramatic events are a lot more distant from each other, and between them are long undramatic stretches… contrary to what most people believe, one doesn’t learn any more in the long version than in the short one.

On the meaning of the opening title “Paris and its double”:

I wanted the two titles to indicate that the film was shot in April and May 1970 – that, for me, is the important thing, since there are many allusions in the dialogue to that period. It should be evident that the group of thirteen individuals had probably met and talked for some time until May 1968, when everything changed and they probably disbanded.

David Thomson:

Out 1: Spectre begins as nothing more than scenes from Parisian life; only as time goes by do we realize that there is a plot — perhaps playful, perhaps sinister — that implicates not just the thirteen characters (including Léaud, as the mystery’s self-styled detective), but maybe everyone, everywhere. Real life may be nothing but an enormous yarn someone somewhere is spinning.

More Out 1: intro, actors/characters, story day 2

Episode 1 – From Lili to Thomas

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Opening titles, very specific. Ignore the Italian subtitles and TV station logo.

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We open on Lili’s group doing warmup exercises and trying some things out.

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Meanwhile, deaf/dumb Colin is harassing diners and Frederique is robbing them.

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Thomas’s Prometheus group totally improvs around a red dressing manneqin for a very long time, getting messy and having some fun.

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Lili’s group has screaming practice.

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Colin stamps more beggar cards, and Fred dreams of death.

——————–
Episode 2 – From Thomas to Frederique

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Prometheus group discusses their options, looks for visual inspiration.

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Beatrice meets the ethnologist and I forget what they say to each other, but Wikipedia says they were in a relationship. Fred introduces us to Honey Moon.

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MARIE gives the first (or second?) note to Colin! Marie!!

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Lili and Elaine have a chat. Nicolas is acting up.

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Colin gets a third note at his apartment and sets to work analyzing them.

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Fred fails to scam money off a couple pornographers. The Prometheus group has a beat-up-on-Bergamotte session.

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We meet Lucie, Lili’s old friend, and talk about Georges, Pierre and/or Igor for the first time. No sign of a secret society yet.

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Episode 3 – From Frederique to Sarah

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Colin talks to a Balzac professor and gets obsessed on the book “History of the Thirteen”… works to decode his secret messages.

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Fred pickpockets another diner, Lili’s group practices singing some more.

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Colin’s clues lead to Pauline’s shop.

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Thomas’s group is still trying to figure out Prometheus. First Thomas plays him, then Faune does.

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Fred tries to rob the wrong guy, gets beaten up by Marlon. Colin speaks!

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Thomas snuggles with Beatrice, calls Sarah up at the beach house.

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Fred ponders death some more and Thomas goes to the beach…

——————–
Episode 4 – From Sarah to Colin

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Thomas convinces Sarah to come back to Paris, takes one last walk on the beach.

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Colin sees Lili’s gang at the diner, recognizes Marie.

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Fred robs a horny young man, and Colin gets thrown out of the Paris Jour repeatedly.

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The groups do their thing.

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Fred experiments with death some more, and Colin introduces himself as a Paris Jour reporter to Pauline’s group.

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Renaud shows up and tries out with Lili’s group. Nicolas tries to pick up Fred.

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Colin gets close to Pauline, Thomas’s group tries another bizarre exercise.

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Fred meets a chess player… and steals some letters from his desk.

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Thomas visits Pauline at home, with her two kids and housekeeper Iris. I never figured this part out while watching the movie.

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Fred ponders her letters and Colin ponders his.

More Out 1: intro, actors/characters, story day 1

Episode 5 – From Colin to Pauline

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Frederique calls the chess player (Etienne) and offers his letters back at a price. He politely declines. Colin gets comfortable at Pauline’s place and eats all her jam.

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Business at usual with Thomas’s group, but Quentin’s new acquaintance Renaud is starting to take over the other group, makikng Lili uncomfortable.

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Fred can’t unload the letters on Lucie either, but Pauline is very interested.

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Quentin wins the lottery or a horse race or something, and Renaud steals the money minutes later. The celebration party goes on anyway.

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Sarah’s doing just fine at the Prometheus group. Lili’s group divides up the city to begin searching for Renaud.

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Pauline buys two of Fred’s letters.

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Warok and Iris are not impressed.

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Colin meets Sarah, who has business with Pauline… and follows Sarah to the theater.

——————–
Episode 6 – From Pauline to Emilie

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The search for Renaud is on.

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Colin plays a newspaper man again and interviews Thomas, while Sarah looks on amused. Then he hangs around and bothers Beatrice.

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Fred finds Warok, and Colin brings a young lady home.

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Thomas likes Sarah AND Beatrice. Wikipedia says they “engage in a threesome” but I think they’re reading too much into it.

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“Lorenzo’s envoy” comes calling at Pauline’s place. She knocks him out, stashes him in the basement and flees. I don’t get this part. Talks to Colin first… it’s the last time he’ll see her in the course of the movie.

David Ehrenstein, from the (now hidden) comments:

The part you “don’t get” has to do with the massive revelation that “L’Angle du Hasard” is a cover for a sinister underground. Up until this point “Les 13” is simply an idea that several of the characters toyed with at some point in the past. But what Sarah and Pauline/Emily are up to is very much in earnest, as are Renaud’s dealings which lead to Frederique’s death (a sequence not included in any form in “Out 1: Spectre.”)

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Thomas talks to Etienne about these letters and the group. Fred checks out the guy Honey Moon has a crush on… it’s Renaud!

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Lili has gone missing, so Quentin joins Thomas’s group.

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Colin nearly breaks down over his letters… finally hits upon the coded word: WAROK.

——————–
Episode 7 – From Emilie to Lucie

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Colin finds Warok, who gives him no clues. Fred didn’t actually cut & dye her hair, but was only wearing her Intrigue Wig.

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What of our two theater groups? Thomas’s group is doing jolly well, but Lili is wandering the beach on her own.

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Elaine alerts Lucie that Lili is gone… Lucie is standoffish. Beatrice meets her guy for the last time, I believe.

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Iris and Sarah confront Emilie (formerly Pauline) when she tries to send her purchased letters to the papers, trying to implicate Pierre in her boyfriend Igor’s disappearance.

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Fred and Renaud make a cute couple.

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Colin can’t find Emilie… because she’s gone to the beach house and met up with Lili.

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Thomas talks with his co-conspirators about the Emilie Letters Affair… then goes off to the beach house with Achille and Faune.

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Fred and Renaud get comfy. Colin gets no answers from Sarah.

——————–
Episode 8 – From Lucie to Marie

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The beach house group has some tea. Emilie goes over things with a semi-hostile Sarah.

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Colin gathers his thoughts. Fred dreams of death some more.

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Either the beach house is turning into a Celine & Julie creep-fest, or everyone’s messing with Emilie’s mind. Thomas reconnects with his old flame Lili.

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Colin revisits Warok, sees Lucie, gets frustrated with the whole thing.

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This shot has been recurring in the last few episodes. At first I thought it was a wide shot of Quentin’s oddball search for Renaud, but I never did see Quentin in the frame. Now Q is off doing theater I suppose and this shot comes back in episode 8. Can’t explain.

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I don’t know what she’s thinking, but Frederique goes all Feuillade and starts stalking Renaud while he has a secret rooftop meeting with some guys.

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She surprises him and he kills her by accident.

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Emilie gets a phone call from her beloved Igor. He’s waiting for her at Warok’s house. She and Lili leave straight away for Paris.

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Colin is back at work in the cafes with his harmonica.

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Thomas breaks down out on the beach. Maybe something to do with losing Beatrice, Sarah and now Lili? The theater group? The group of 13? The letters? Igor’s return? Not really worried about it, because it seems a fitting ending.

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Final shot, Marie, still looking for Renaud?

More Out 1: intro, story day 1, story day 2

Prometheus Group:

Thomas – Michael Lonsdale, in a couple movies by Francois Truffaut and Marguerite Duras, Resnais’s Stavisky, Bunuel’s Phantom of Liberty, Welles’ The Trial, and some American thrillers like Ronin, Munich, and Moonraker.
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Leader of the group, friend of Sarah, overall conspirator. Seems in charge for the first half and gets progressively more unhinged towards the end, possibly because of his romantic interest in Lili, Sarah, and/or Beatrice.

Achille – Sylvain Corthay, had small parts in Demy’s Donkey Skin and Rivette’s Joan of Arc. Has a public website and email address.
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Beatrice – Edwine Moatti
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Leaves the group towards the end of the movie.

Bergamotte – Bernadette Onfroy
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Rose – Christiane Corthay
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Faune РMonique Cl̩ment, played Myrtille in Celine & Julie (who was that?)
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Seven Against Thebes Group:

Lili – Michèle Moretti, from Rivette’s L’Amour fou. Still active in TV and movies, has been in a lot of stuff, incl. an André Téchiné film.
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Lili leads the Thebes group. She’s one of the 13, and used to be in Thomas’s group before she left and started her own using different techniques.

Quentin – Pierre Baillot, started out in William Klein’s famous 60’s movies, later in Rivette’s Joan of Arc.
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Wins a million francs on a horse race, which is immediately stolen by Renaud. At the end, when things start unravelling, he’s the only member of Lili’s group to join Thomas’s.

Marie – Hermine Karagheuz, played a nurse in Secret Defense, also in Merry Go Round and Duelle.
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Sent the letters to Colin? So, a friend of Pierre?

Nicolas – Marcel Bozonnet, also in Rivette’s Joan of Arc and Up Down Fragile.
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AKA Arsenal, Papa, Théo, Yogurt and others. I think each character calls him by a different name. A real ladies’ man. These two things may be related.

Elaine – Karen Puig
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The one who tells Lucie when Lili runs off to Obade

Solo Artists:

Colin – Jean-Pierre Leaud, french new wave poster boy, one of my favorite actors, star of Truffaut’s Antoine Doinel series, also appeared in films by Jean-Luc Godard, Agnes Varda, Jean Cocteau, Luc Moullet, Catherine Breillat, Raoul Ruiz, Jean Eustache, Philippe Garrel, Aki Kaurismäki, Olivier Assayas, Bernardo Bertolucci and Tsai Ming-Liang.
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Colin is first credited as “the deaf-mute”. Gets coded messages that lead him around the city trying to uncover the secret group of thirteen. Falls for Pauline (Emilie) and hangs out at her shop.

Frederique – Juliet Berto also played Celine! Also in Duelle and a few Godard movies, died in 1990.
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Along with Colin, one of the two who seem to drive the plot. Steals some letters between members of the 13 and tries to uncover the group and sell the letters.

Conspirators:

Emilie – Bulle Ogier, played Camille (the blonde ghost) in Celine & Julie. Starred in Duelle, Gang of Four, Don’t Touch The Axe and L’Amour Fou, also in Discreet Charm and Irma Vep.
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Known as Pauline in Paris, has two kids by her lover Igor who has disappeared. Runs a shop in Paris, where Colin meets her. May own the house in Obade, too, so either she or Igor is wealthy.

Sarah – Bernadette Lafont, an original nouvelle vague actress, starring in Truffaut’s Les Mistons and Chabrol’s Les Bonnes Femmes and Le Beau Serge. Has been in a ton of things, incl. Noroit, Ruiz’s Genealogies of a Crime, Malle’s Le Voleur, and The Mother and the Whore.
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An old friend of Thomas’s, her return to Paris leads eventually to the breakup of the Prometheus group, or at least the abandonment of the play.

Renaud – Alain Libolt, appeared in Army of Shadows and a few Eric Rohmer films.
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The object of Honeymoon’s affection, ends up dating Frederique after stealing Quentin’s cash and fleeing the Thebes group.

Lucie – Francoise Fabian, title role in My Night at Maud’s and the mother in Secret Defense, among many others.
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Lawyer, friend of Lili, seems to know everyone.

Warok – Jean Bouise, in a ton of movies I haven’t heard of, plus The War Is Over, Z, and Joseph Losey’s Mr. Klein, which had a bunch of interesting actors in it. Died before the release of his final film, La Femme Nikita.
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Member (maybe leader) of the 13.

Etienne – Jacques Donoil-Valcroze, co-founder of Cahiers du Cinema, died in 1989. A screenwriter and director from as far back as 1956, played the husband in Le Coup du Berger.
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Chess player whose letters get stolen by Frederique.

Iris – Ode Bitton
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Emilie’s nanny

Georges, Pierre and Igor
Members of the 13, mentioned in conversations, letter and phone calls but never seen.

Minor Cast:

Honeymoon – Michel Berto, got small parts in Merry Go Round and Joan of Arc, died in 1995.
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Frederique’s only real friend, it seems.

Max
Quentin’s son.

Nicolas’s friend
I think her character’s only purpose is for numerology’s sake… she and Max help search for Renaud after the theft, dividing the city into seven sections.

Gian-Reto – Barbet Schroeder, played the guy in the house in Celine & Julie and has a part in Don’t Touch The Axe. Directed Maitresse and some famed documentaries in the 70’s and since the late 80’s he’s been making commercial Hollywood thrillers.

Martin, Chausette, Leonard
Hangers-on at Elaine/Pauline’s shop, trying to start a newspaper or magazine.

Colin’s landlady – Gilette Barbier, had small roles in The Nun and movies by Rossellini, Resnais, Varda and Juan Luis Buñuel.
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L’ethnologue – Michel Delahaye of L’Amour Fou and The Nun, has small parts in Truffaut and Godard films.
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Chaussette
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Lorenzo’s envoy – Stéphane Tchalgadjieff, producer of Out 1. He was somehow still willing to work with Rivette afterwards, producing Noroit, Duelle and Merry Go Round. Also The Devil Probably, India Song, Beyond the Clouds and Eros.
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Le Balzacien – played by director Eric Rohmer
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The charactors (actors) and their relationships seem more important than plot/storyline, so I’ve made a page for the characters first, then a story summary page, separated into day one and day two, totalling my most complex journal entry to date!

I spent all this time on plot and character description, not necessarily because the story elements are so important, but because I may not get to see this again and I want to be able to remember it.

Thankfully, I have a downloaded copy of the movie from Raitre Italian TV, so I can get lots of screen shots.

But what of the movie, overall? Worth the trip to New York to see it, for sure. A total experience of a film, from the dedicated audience to the live subtitles to the 16mm presentation to the museum theater that hosted it to the sheer length and intermissions to the Jean-Michel Frodon (Cahiers du Cinema editor) introduction to the content, with its very long wide shots and very gradually developing story… many scenes that only form a complete big-picure scenario if you’re paying close attention for most of its runtime.

Dennis Lim of the NY Times called it “the cinephile’s holy grail” and says:

In the annals of monumental cinema there are few objects more sacred than Mr. Rivette’s 12 1/2-hour OUT 1. Shot in the spring of 1970, this fabled colossus owes its stature not just to its immodest duration but also to its rarity. Commissioned and then rejected by French television, the film had its premiere on Sept. 9 and 10, 1971, at the Maison de la Culture in Le Havre before receding into obscurity . . . has become a true phantom film whose reputation rests on its unattainability . . . Mr. Rivette worked without a script, relying instead on a diagram that mapped the junctures at which members of his large ensemble cast would intersect. The actors came up with their dialogue; the only thing Mr. Rivette actually wrote were the enigmatic notes Mr. Léaud’s character receives . . . With OUT 1 he found the perfect match of form and content, an outsize canvas for a narrative too vast to apprehend. In a 1973 interview Mr. Rivette described the film’s creep from quasi-documentary to drama in ominous terms: the fiction ‘swallows everything up and finally auto-destructs’.

I love it – not just a legendary museum curiosity that people pretend to like to impress other cinephiles, but actually an amazing film worthy of its reputation. Of course, mostly its reputation is that of an unattainable film (we were told this was the eighth-ever public screening), not of a great masterwork… but I guess it’s worthy of both of those.

The experimental theater exercises get very long, even too long, but not tedious. If a scene lasts “too long” in a regular movie, maybe you could’ve trimmed two minutes to make it feel right. But the theater scenes aren’t necessary at all, from a story point of view, so there’s no telling how long they need to be. When it hits me that I’ve been watching the same theater scene for twenty minutes, it’s not annoyance but awe that hits me. It’s hard to say what exactly is necessary in this movie… once you start cutting or shortening scenes, tying up loose ends and clarifying character connections and histories, you’re talking about a different movie (and not SPECTRE, but a different movie entirely). Best leave it the unwieldy beast it is, and appreciate it as that.

Dennis Lim’s article is a good one… here’s more:

“Out 1” now seems a relic of a bohemian heyday, a time when you could spend your days rehearsing ancient Greek plays or making 12-hour films. But even in 1970 that hazy idyll was already fading. The film takes its shape, as Mr. Rosenbaum has noted, from “the successive building and shattering of utopian dreams.” An epic meditation on the relationship between the individual and the collective, “Out 1” devotes its second half to fracture and dissolution. But it’s not a depressing film, perhaps because its implicit pessimism is refuted by its very existence. Experiential in the extreme, “Out 1” cannot help transforming the solitary act of moviegoing into a communal one.

And Lim says that Rivette’s 2007 movie Don’t Touch The Axe will be revisiting Balzac’s “History of the Thirteen”. “Does this represent a closing of the circle? An expansion of the master plan? If there’s one thing we know from Mr. Rivette’s films, it’s that the big picture will remain just outside our grasp.”

Ah ha: Rivette’s interview from Film Comment… he says shots of Paris’s landmarks “were inserted…frankly as empty spaces. As a kind of visual silence. . .” I had been wondering.

Reverse Shot says: “In Rivette there’s a sense, not just of watching or duration, both of which are passive ideas, but of actively being put through a process”.

Crawford in Reverse Shot:

Out 1 was made in the aftermath of the social uprising of May ’68, when a series of strikes by Parisian student unions devolved into a full-bore confrontation with the military. What once began as a hope to radically reinvent the mores of a stagnant and conservative society ended meekly, with the unions urging a peaceable return to work and De Gaulle’s party consolidating its power to a greater degree than ever. Out 1 taps into this post-May ’68 malaise, betraying an abiding mistrust in grand social movements, services organizations. Paris is turned into a disconnected amalgam of individual groups hermetically sealed off from one another. . .

Is it too simplistic to describe Colin as a spectator’s surrogate and leave it at that? What do we make of choice to pose as a deaf-mute and his return to that state at the end of the film? How, for that matter, do we take of the weird behavior of the male (Colin) and female (Frédérique) interlopers? Their logic and mode of behavior is vastly different from anyone else in the film; it’s like they’ve parachuted in from Céline and Julie Go Boating.