The most insidious thing about the nouveau movie, which is a polite way of describing Marguerite Duras's newest, most minimal film, "Nathalie Granger," is that it traps you in its own time, unlike the nouveau roman, which can be skipped through or read at leisure in an afternoon or a year.
You can't skip through "Nathalie Granger." To see it you are forced to watch it for as long as it lasts, while, in turn, it watches its characters, rather as if the camera were a Siamese cat whose feelings had been hurt.
This is a free excerpt of 92 words. There are 303 words (approx.
1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.
Read the rest of this Criticism with our Duras, Marguerite 1914–: Critical Essay by Vincent Canby Access Pass.