Tuesday, August 2, 2011

"Marty" and the Search for Beauty

I came into the house Sunday afternoon after digging in the garden and my husband had the movie "Marty" on the TV. I'd never seen it before, but he's seen it dozens of times. I sat down and watched with him.

This gem tells a simple story about regular people. A 34-year-old bachelor named Marty Pilletti is hounded by his friends, his family, even the customers in the butcher shop where he works in the Bronx about why he is still single. It won the 1955 Academy Award for Best Picture and the Palme d'Or at Cannes.

It's not that Marty doesn't want to marry. But Marty, who lives with his widowed Italian mother, has had no luck even in dating. In one of the film's first scenes we see Marty, played by actor Ernest Borgnine, calling a young lady he met a month earlier and asking her out. (pictured above) We can tell from the expression on his face that she is turning him down. From that lonely moment in his parents' living room, his pain and his quest are ours. "I've been looking for a girl every Saturday night of my life. " Marty says. He is stocky and plain but we can see he is also a good man, honest and hardworking and loyal.


One aspect of the film that surprised me was the presence of and depiction of Catholic culture. Marty and the rest of his extended family go to Sunday Mass. The fact that Clara is Cathoic, too, appeals to Marty.


American playwright Paddy Chayefsky wrote the screenplay, with its believable depiction of mid20th century Italian immigrants and their Americanized children. The dialogue is superb: funny and poignant. 

When Marty meets Clara, a plain lonesome high school Chemistry teacher, he brings her to his mother's house. Later, his mother tells him: (on the steps of their parish church) "Those college girls, they are one step from the street." Marty protests: "She's a nice girl." "She doesn't look Italian." 

And so we understand that Marty, who has been harangued by everyone for being single, now faces the disapproval of his mother and everyone else in his life when he finally finds the girl who is beautiful to him. Against this is the backdrop of Marty's neighborhood with the changing mores between Italians and their American children. 

This film is short: 91 minutes. The plot and setting are simple. But because Marty's quest becomes our own, this movie will find a place in your heart long after the DVD is over.


10 comments:

  1. It must be more than 50 years since I saw the movie. Time to look for it again! I don't recall the Catholic dimension. But another Italian-American movie that also expresses that is 'Moonstruck'. There it involves a recognition of sinfulness, God's mercy for sinners in the sacrament of confession and the ability of a Catholic family to forgive.

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  2. Father Sean: I don't know if Netflix made its way to the Philipines. If you have an account, you could also stream it on your computer.

    Thanks for reminding me about "Moonstruck." Another wonderful movie, with a message as you say, about redemption.

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  3. Ernest Borgnine what a wonderful actor,A year later in" A catered Affair" he played Bette davis Husband father of the bride to be Debbie Reynolds, written by the same author.

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  4. Thanks, Allison. I just added this to our Netflix queue and moved it to #1. I know I've never seen it and it sounds wonderful.

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  5. @Diddleymaz: I will have to check that one out.
    @Sandy C: Please let me (us) know what you think!

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  6. Just checked. Netflix not available in the Philippines! Thank you for letting me know about it.

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  7. Boo. I know, if you are so inclined, there are other services you can get on your computer, such as Amazon Prime. Again, not sure if they are available to your location.

    We saw the movie on "turner movie classics" on cable.
    Blessings to you and the work you do.

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  8. That reminds me...I just saw "Hobson's Choice" on TCM recently and that is a great movie about marriage, a Cinderella story in reverse.

    HannahG

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  9. @HannahG: Just googled that one. It looks good. It's going on my Netflix queue! Thank you.

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  10. Allison, if you do get to see it I look forward to reading your thoughts on it. "Hobson's Choice" and also "Kings Row" are movies that illustrate Christian marriage and true spiritual maturity. What most astounds me is how these characters deviate from today's scripts.

    HannahG

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