Do you remember all of those movies in the
1990’s about someone who didn’t know what they wanted to be or where
they wanted to go. There was an emphasis on just hanging out and killing
time until the next day to start again or the work
their way into the next weekend of killing time until Monday. Marty
stands as the originator of this type of plot where a young man has
stayed with his mother beyond his years and is just following the
current that is life.
The film stars Ernest Borgnine as the title
character, a butcher who lives with his mother and hangs out with his
buddies at night and on weekends. Even with all of these people in his
life, Marty is lonely. He longs to be with a girl;
a nice girl. As the film proceeds we follow Marty as he attempts to
begin relationships with females that are mainly acquaintances, ships
floating by in the dead of the night that you may wonder where they
traveled after your encounter, but you’ll never see
them again. What happens next is the “when you least expect it” notion
kicks in and Marty meets Clara (Betsy Blair) who he becomes enchanted
with, even though Clara goes against the world that Marty has created
for himself.
Borgnine’s performance is on par with some of
the best work of the 1950’s, going well beyond the norms of the era.
When Marty is shot down, lonely, excited, you feel it in his
performance. You come along on this ride with Marty and it is
an emotional roller coaster. It’s a portrayal that will stay with you
long after seeing this film. It’s a masterpiece of a performance that
won Borgnine a well deserved Academy Award. Those feelings go hand in
hand with what you feel as a viewer, particularly
when Marty and Clara begin their courtship. You feel those feelings
that a person experiences when they meet a person and they like that
person, spending hours with them just talking or walking or whatever
because it doesn’t matter. You just want to be with
that person. It’s a hard feeling to describe and it is something that
comes up when reminiscing about that first meeting, but it’s a universal
feeling that a person holds onto throughout the rest of their life.
Marty captures that moment perfectly. I can’t
think of a film that displays that moment and those feelings like Marty
does. Usually they end up in slapstick like blah. There is not gimmick
or pratfall. This is just two people falling for each other.
Marty is a best picture winner and coming from a
time when epics and big names usually won the big prize Marty is a nice
little breath of fresh air. It still holds the record as the shortest
Best Picture
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