Adapted from her own play, Duras’s solo directorial debut concerns an isolated hotel surrounded by dense forest, with only four guests in evidence: a professor of “future history” and his young bride (Henri Garcin and Nicole Hiss), a troubled woman (Catherine Sellers) recovering from a miscarriage, and a German would-be writer (Michael Lonsdale) with designs on the professor’s wife. Despite the roundelay of attraction, Smiles of a Summer Night this is not; its claustrophobia (the women fear the forest) and convergence of identities (Hiss and Sellers share one of the director’s trademark mirror scenes) place it much closer to Persona. In Film as a Subversive Art, Amos Vogel praises its “highly stylized, non-logical dialogue [which] creates enigmatic fear.”