EDNote:  While tyrannically repressing Andrew Brown's enthusiastic (but personal) reply to Jansy's Johnston/Johnson post, I had two relevant thoughts.  (I have not seen the movie yet, but it received strong reviews).  First: the name-switching reminds one of the Humbert/Humberg/Homberg mutations that take place at the Enchanted Hunters.  I also thought of Charles Johnston, a post-VN translator of Eugene Onegin.  The entire cast list looks fishy (there is a "Dora"; Lolita's last name is "Miller"--not Schiller).  I suspect that what Andrew Brown calls the project's "vague but probably unintentional debt to VN" is almost certainly intentional.  But I would bet that the Charles Johnston link is pure coincidence.  A review at the following site mentions VN's influence on the film. Curiously, Jarmusch doesn't list Nabokov of one of his favorite authors (see list appended below).  -SB
Review
http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/08.10.05/broken-0532.html

* * *
from: http://members.tripod.com/~jimjarmusch/recommended.html
In the Q&A section of Criterion's Down by Law DVD, Jarmusch was asked to name some of his favorite books. He mentioned these:

"Tristram Shandy" by Laurence Sterne.
"Madame Bovary" and "Sentimental Education" by Gustave Flaubert.
Honoré de Balzac
Marcel Proust
"Orlando Furioso" by Ariosto.
"The Inferno" by Dante.
"Hamlet" by Shakeapeare.
William Blake.
"Illuminations" and "The Drunken Boat" by Rimbaud.
New York school of poets, such as Frank O'Hara, John Ahsbery, James Schuyler, Kenneth Koch, David Shapiro, Ron Padgett and Frank Lima.
"Impressions of Africa" by Raymond Roussel.
Rilke.
Pablo Neruda.
Pierre Reverdy.
Stéphane Mallarmé.
Georges Bataille.
Blaise Cendrars.
"The Woman Chaser" by Charles Willeford.
"Red Harvest" by Dashiell Hammett.
"Serenade" by James M Cain.
"The Diaries of Adam and Eve" by Mark Twain.
"The Factory of Facts" and "Low Life" by Luc Sante.
"The Gangs of New York" by Herbert Ashbury.
"Coming through Slaughter" by Michael Ondaatje.
Samuel Beckett ("novels rather than plays").


Search the Nabokv-L archive at UCSB

Contact the Editors

All private editorial communications, without exception, are read by both co-editors.