Archive for the ‘Marty’ Category

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Marty Streaming

Jeudi, juillet 15th, 2010
Marty Streaming. Marty Streaming.

Movie Title: Marty
Average customer review:

Marty is available for streaming or downloading.

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I impartial noticed that a scene is missing from the DVD that was in my previous VHS version. The scene that I am refering to is factual after Marty takes Clara home there is a short scene where she tells her parents about her date and how blissful she is. This scene lasted about a shrimp or two. I don’t know what’s unfriendly with MGM lately. They forgot to include the fresh subtitles in “Spinal Tap” they butchered half the “Bond” films with either missing scenes or non existent subtitles and now this. I judge we as consumers deserve better than this. We’ve had to endure MGM’s blunders for far too long. Let them know that you’re not satisified at all with the quality of their DVD’s.

Written by the gifted Paddy Chayefsky, this is a memorable film, deftly directed by Delbert Mann. That it has a stage-like, theatrical feel to it is not surprising, considering that it was first a made-for-television play that was later augmented for the silver mask. This element of theatricality, however, does not detract in the least from this gritty, thematically complex film.

Ernest Borgnine plays the role of Marty Piletti, a stocky, thirty-four year customary, lonely Italian butcher living at home in the Bronx with his mother. He is the last of the Piletti brood detached in the nest. Physically unattractive and a bit doltish, he is a socially awkward, lumbering lummox of internal distress and angst. His mother wants him to secure married, or so she thinks, until the reality of what such might ultimately mean for her sinks in. She takes her cue from her sister, Marty’s Aunt Catherine, who is living with her son and daughter-in-law and making their lives hell. Consequently, she is going to travel in with Marty and his mother.

Marty spends most of his spare time with his friend Angie, as well as with a bunch of other losers. Unloved, unmarried, and unable to accept a date, Marty has all but given up on finding Miss Honest, when he meets a twenty-nine year primitive high school teacher, also from the Bronx, Clara Snyder (Betsy Blair), at the celebrated Stardust Ballroom. Clara, a well educated, nice plain-Jane, is there as section of a pity double date arranged by her brother-in-law. Unfortunately, her date turns out to be a total cad who unceremoniously tries to fob her off on anyone he can, so that he can earn some action going with a hot babe he knows. Marty feels Clara’s harm, so he asks her to dance, not shiny that he is meeting his feminine counterpart and soul-mate.

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As the film peels the layers from Marty, the viewer meets the sensitive, kind man who lives within the unattractive exterior. The viewer really gets to feel his injure, as well as that of some of the other characters in the film. One senses the feelings of alienation and loneliness in Clara, as she is dumped by her caddish date. One senses the alarm that Mrs. Piletti has at the reality of what Marty’s getting married might mean for her. Aunt Catherine’s ouster from her son’s home, as the older, unwanted woman with few options in life, also makes an impact on the viewer. The angst of Aunt Catherine’s son at having to sever to his wife, rather than to his mother, is also palpable, as is that of Angie at the notion of the possibility of no longer having Marty around to fragment his occupy social isolation.

The themes in this film, such as loneliness, isolation, alienation, and scare are all themes mild relevant today. The only right anachronistic ticket is struck by the fact that Mrs. Piletti and Aunt Catherine both appear to be in their unhurried sixties or early seventies, but I found to my complete surprise that Aunt Catherine is supposed to be fifty-six, and Mrs. Piletti is her younger sister! Trust me when I say that, nowadays, women in their fifties do not peek like that.

All in all, this is an first-rate film. Those who enjoyed this film should also eye out another Paddy Chayefsky film, “The Catered Affair”, starring Bette Davis and Ernest Borgnine, which is a bitter sweet film about another Bronx family.
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