Merry-Go-Round
Merry-Go-Round
| 08 October 1981 (USA)
Merry-Go-Round Trailers

New Yorker Ben Phillips and mysterious Léo Hoffmann are strangers who are summoned to Paris by a mutual acquaintance. Upon arrival, they meet and soon find themselves tangled in a complex mystery.

Reviews
Breakinger A Brilliant Conflict
GarnettTeenage The film was still a fun one that will make you laugh and have you leaving the theater feeling like you just stole something valuable and got away with it.
Kodie Bird True to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
Payno I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
gavin6942 Elizabeth sends telegrams to her old boyfriend Ben in New York City and to her younger sister Leo in Rome to join her in Paris, where she is selling her dead father's estate. When Ben and Leo arrive, a mysterious adventure begins.What is the "mysterious adventure"? No one knows for sure. The film is somewhat surreal, with a blend of French and English, and the occasional group of jazz musicians thrown in for no apparent reason other than to add something artsy to this art film.Star Maria Schneider became famous for portraying Jeanne opposite Marlon Brando in Bernardo Bertolucci's "Last Tango in Paris" (1972); and the Girl in Michelangelo Antonioni's "The Passenger" (1975), opposite Jack Nicholson. So, depending on how you look at it, she was coming off some big successes, or on her way out. She is playing opposite Joe Dallesandro, who may be a major cult figure (given his connections to Warhol, the Rolling Stones and Lou Reed) but is not a household name.
Bob Taylor This one is mainly for Rivette completists. There are gaps in the plot and a lack of commitment on the part of some actors, notably Schneider which ensure that this film will not be counted among Rivette's greatest. I watched it on YouTube as part of my review of his works following the news of his death. The story is not weak--it's an amalgam of film noir and road movie--but the way it is told, in a slap dash manner leaving too much up to chance, disappointed me.The great pleasure in Merry-go-round is provided by John Surman's mournful noodlings on bass clarinet, which often seem more interesting than what the actors are doing. Joe Dallesandro exercised a fascination on more than one filmmaker (I remember how Louis Malle used him in Black Moon, and his films with Andy Warhol are still around) and he does here too. His mad chase through the woods pursued by a knight in armor recalls the fight scene in Black Moon.
JoeKulik I viewed five films by Jacques Rivette before this one, so I'm accustomed to his bizarre style and, overall, I love it. However, Merry-Go-Round, the sixth Rivette film that I've viewed is very poor compared to the others. The "storyline" is a muddled mess that didn't make sense for me either on a "straight", literal level, or on a symbolic level.Why would any sane man fly from NYC to Paris just because an ex-girlfriend sent him a telegram asking him to do so?Why didn't anyone, especially sis Leo, call the cops after Elizabeth was kidnapped? Why would Leo and the attorney's secretary enter an abandoned building alone to rescue Elizabeth, i.e., without the cops? After escaping kidnapping, why would Elizabeth enter back into negotiations with the very people who kidnapped her? After Leo and Ben fail to find Elizabeth at the graveyard, they are counting pennies between them to see if they have enough for cab fare back to the hotel, suggesting that they came from Rome and NYC, respectively, with no cash on them. Who would travel so far from home being absolutely broke? Why was it necessary for the fake Mr Danvers to be a psychic medium? The segments of Leo running in the woods, and the anonymous girl running in the sand dunes didn't fit in with the film in any way.Overall, the screenplay here looks like an assemblage of elements that were randomly picked out of a hat.This film is truly unworthy of an otherwise GREAT filmmaker like Jacques Rivette. If you've never seen a Rivette film before, then do not start here, because this film is a POOR representative of his work.
Mort-31 I didn't even know Jacques Rivette's name before a retrospective for him started at this year's Viennale. Now I heard a lot about Rivette from the media, and I managed to see one film - and I'm really sorry for not being able to see another one!This movie, Merry-Go-Round, was a great pleasure for me to watch because, against all odds, it turned out to be - a crime film! A crime film though, that formally switched between extreme realism (Rivette seams to be famous for letting the actors improvise a lot) and absurd postmodernism - but, after all, a fine story about criminals. Only that the criminals were not typical gangsters: a young American (played by an Italian but as he did it convincingly, I accept it) and the child-like and wild and very sexy Maia Schneider. And many more. Oh, and two po-faced musicians who perform the soundtrack of the movie before our eyes, live, so to say.And above all, this movie was very funny - you wouldn't expect such a funny film from a filmmaker who is weird enough to make a motion picture that has a running time of 13 hours.I should mention that the girl with whom I saw the movie had a head-ache afterwards. So, be careful.