REVIEW: Andrew Dominik's “Blonde,” a fictional meditation on the life of Marilyn Monroe, is brutal, bruising — and often beautiful, writes AP's JocelynNoveckAP.
What “Blonde” IS is ambitious. Far-reaching, at times perhaps too far. And frequently gorgeous, especially in expertly rendered scenes of old-fashioned Hollywood glitz, mainly in black-and-white — the endless flashbulbs popping on the red carpet, the fans ogling, their faces sometimes distorted by lust. There are wonderful recreations of scenes from movies like “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” and “The Seven Year Itch.
We begin at the beginning — and an awful beginning it is. Young Norma Jeane lives alone with her mother who’s slowly descending into madness. On her birthday, her mother shows the little girl a picture of a handsome man who, she says, was her father. The girl will ache for him from that day forward. Life is not safe with her mother, and when the woman finally has a total breakdown Norma Jeane soon ends up at an orphanage.
Like Cannavale, Adrien Brody is wonderfully cast as Marilyn’s next husband, playwright Arthur Miller, a cerebral man who is amazed at her actual intellect — she reads Chekhov! — and offers what she hopes will be a stable life in Connecticut. She gets pregnant but tragedy strikes again. Soon, Marilyn will be hitting the pills, the bottles, and the bottles of pills.
Singapore Latest News, Singapore Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Netflix’s racy new Ana de Armas movie hits theaters Friday (and lands on Netflix soon)Netflix's highly anticipated film 'Blonde,' starring Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe, hits theaters this weekend.
Read more »
Blonde Review: Ana de Armas Hypnotizes in Hollow Marilyn Monroe Tribute.TheWolfman says Blonde is visually striking and AnaDeArmas is hypnotizing in an ultimately hollow exploration of MarilynMonroe. Full review here:
Read more »
In Blonde, Ana de Armas explores Marilyn Monroe's tragic rootsDespite a transformative performance by de Armas, director Andrew Dominik can't decide whether he wants to indict or indulge us for our curiosity about Monroe
Read more »
‘Blonde’: Ana de Armas Is a Revelation as Marilyn Monroe in This Dark Portrait of Misogyny''Blonde' is a film about performance and the many ways in which it conceals and reveals. To that end, Ana de Armas’ turn is nothing short of a tour de force.' - nschager Read the full review of the highly-anticipated film:
Read more »
Ana De Armas Is Good In “Blonde.” Too Bad The Movie Is A Mess.Ana De Armas’ star turn enlivens Netflix's Marilyn movie, which attempts to be inventively edgy, but has little new to say.
Read more »