LOS ANGELES — Beautiful yet unapproachable, opaque and occasionally incomprehensible, “Knight of Cups” shares its personality with its self-absorbed Hollywood characters. Which makes it business as usual for its unconcerned writer-director, Terrence Malick.

From “Badlands” and “Days of Heaven,” his earliest films, through the more recent “The Tree of Life” and “To the Wonder,” Malick has moved with unbending firmness further and further away from conventional (and comprehensible) narration.

Malick works with major stars (Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett and Natalie Portman among others in this case) but makes only feints and stabs at the outlines of a plot, though the language and the situations themselves are for all intents and purposes improvised.

It also doesn't help things that what little story Malick allows tends toward the pretentious and self-important. “Knight of Cups” (named for a card in the tarot deck) delivers us to the brooding company of an enigmatic, largely silent Hollywood type named Rick (Bale) who spends more time searching for meaning in his life than a Gauloise-smoking French existentialist.

The only thing that keeps “Knight of Cups” from terminal artistic overreach as it follows Rick around town is the knockout cinematography of three-time Oscar winner Emmanuel Lubezki, who does superb work showing us contemporary Los Angeles in a most magical way.

Rick is said to be a screenwriter, though the closest we get to see him actually working is conversations he has with a series of agents who say things like “we'll double your quote” and “let me tell you about you.”

When not occupied with agents or equally tormented family members such as his brother (Wes Bentley) or his father (Brian Dennehy), Rick spends his time living the lush life to an extent actual screenwriters rarely do, going to Hollywood parties and cavorting with platoons of female accomplices.

In addition to these party types, we see brief fragments of relationships of different sorts Rick has with no fewer than six women. These include the married Elizabeth (Portman) and Helen (Freida Pinto), a model who's tired of “wreaking havoc in men's lives.”

And don't forget the ethereal Isabel (Isabel Lucas) or Nancy (Blanchett), Rick's ex-wife, a doctor whose specialty seems to involve, of all things, leprosy.

The thing about “Knight of Cups” is that any attempt to even provisionally summarize it on paper makes it sound much more understandable than it is. The film is absent anything resembling a conventional scene, consisting instead of fragments, slivers, snippets of recorded memory linked by uninspired voice-over.

As beautiful as it looks and as avant-garde as its techniques may sound, the film's notion of the destructive, soul-destroying power of the movie business is as dreary and dated as those wild and crazy parties Rick is forever going to.

“Dreams are nice, but you can't live in them,” the glamorous Helen tells Rick. That may be true for most people, but Malick has found a way to live in his. Too bad there's not room there for anyone else.