MARATHON MAN: 4K UHD Blu-ray (Paramount, 1976) Kino Lorber
Paranoia ran rampant in the 1970s –
at least in American movie thrillers. Understandable perhaps, given that the
decade was kicked off by the brutal and senseless slayings of actress Sharon Tate
and a houseful of guests in 1969 - an unspeakable atrocity compounded by the
vial executions of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca – all at the instigation of cult
leader, Charles Manson. By mid-decade the cultural mood in the United States in
general had shifted to disillusionment with dystopian views of life in general,
and total skepticism regarding one’s political affiliations. Many, if not all
of the thrillers to emerge throughout the decade would be concentrated in the metropolitan
city centers (New York, Chicago, L.A.) once revered as destinations teeming in
promise, but now, revealed to mirror the filth of urban decay rapidly matured
by an imploding economy. In 1976, the year-long reign of terror perpetrated by
David Berkowicz, better known as ‘son of Sam’, left many more jaded, fearful
and considering community vigilantism as their only counterattack, the police
seemingly powerless to put a period to violent crime.
Movies are a byproduct of their
time and those made throughout the 1970s - with few exceptions - proved very
unflattering reflections of America’s moral, social and cultural decline. The
industry that had fostered our collective dreams now seemed to relish catering
to our most disenchanted hallucinations. Tales of being stalked, hunted,
eavesdropped on, peeped through keyholes, spied with binoculars and telescopes,
investigated by rogue elements in the government, randomly assaulted by unknown
– or worse, known – persons for no apparent good reason – such plot devices
were not only prevalent but set the tone for a truly apocalyptic outlay in dark
thrillers, brooding dramas and harrowing disaster and horror movies. According
the movies, the world was a very scary place. Evil became mainstream and
bankable box office; the anti-hero now the norm, perhaps our only hope to fight
against this cesspool of spurious characters harboring salacious thoughts to
maim murder and annihilate.
That said, some very fine films
were produced between 1970 and 1979 – the worst decade in terms of box office.
Virtually all of them had an underpinning of uncertainty, the audience having
turned, or become morbidly fascinated by their own eroding landscape reflected
back at them from the screen. As for the industry of making movies – it was an
even scarier time. Hollywood was in the throes of a collective malaise
threatening to send even the most venerable companies into receivership. MGM,
the biggest and brightest of the lot ceased operations altogether, becoming a
glorified garage sale after its acquisition by Vegas financier, Kirk Kerkorian.
The other majors were embroiled in a corporate shell game of stakes, stocks and
outright purchases made by conglomerates like Transamerica, Gulf + Western and
Kinney Shoes – companies possessing little to no interest in making movies, but
valuing the ‘prestige on paper’ associated with owning a movie studio.
Perhaps nowhere did the eulogizing
of Hollywood’s past hit so close to home than at Paramount, a studio already at
the precipice. Paramount’s savior, as it turned out, was a former male model/come
actor/come studio production chief – Robert Evans, unencumbered by corporate
haranguing, intuitively gifted and utterly invested in making the types of
movies the public was willing to pay to see. Evans task, to resurrect Paramount
from its’ current status as a virtual non-entity, and at a time when Gulf +
Western, their holding company, was ready to lock its doors and throw away the
key, was a ‘last ditch’ effort that paid off handsomely, thanks to a series of
box office dynamos beginning with 1970s Love Story and 1972’s The
Godfather – two movies that almost did not get made. Given the overwhelming
success of Chinatown (1974) Evans’ immediately went head-hunting for
another thriller, deciding on William Goldman’s Marathon Man (1976) as a
valiant successor.
Marathon Man is perhaps the
pluperfect example of the American-made thriller of the 1970’s, extraordinarily
bleak, methodically paced, expertly played by two of the most celebrated actors
of their respective generations - Sir Laurence Olivier and Dustin Hoffman, and,
staged with sustained stealth by director, John Schlesinger. Verisimilitude is
the order of the day, partly in service to the cultural climate of the decade,
but moreover to keep production costs down. Marathon Man was shot almost
entirely under natural lighting conditions. Conrad Hall’s exceptionally dark
and barren camera eye manages to bottle the impossibly rare and unsettling
sense of foreboding so essential to the genre. Robert Evans has confessed that
the project came together almost as though it were kismet, his first choices in
cast and crew all coming true without so much as a conflict of interest. Marathon
Man was, in fact, shot on two continents, its seemingly disjointed
narrative converging on a diabolical plot about Nazi-diamond smuggling, murder,
international intrigue and espionage. Goldman was hired by Evans to write the screenplay,
agreeing to minor changes to his literary fiction, including a revised climax.
In the novel, marathon runner, Thomas ‘Babe’ Levy (Dustin Hoffman) shoots Nazi
war criminal, Dr. Christian Szell (Laurence Olivier) in cold blood as revenge for
the murder of his brother, Henry ‘Doc’ (Roy Scheider); also, perhaps, to get a
little of his own back, having been tortured by Szell during the now infamous ‘Is
it safe?’ dental examination sequence. In the film, Thomas tosses Szell’s
stash of diamonds down a spiral staircase inside Central Park’s famed
waterworks (actually a set built at Paramount), Szell greedily plummeting down
the stairs after his castoff gems, only to accidentally impale himself on his
own knife.
The film opens with a B&W prologue of the long-distance runner. We cut away to PhD. student Thomas Levy
preparing his thesis on tyranny, in part to exonerate his late father of the
McCarthy blacklist that led to the elder Levy taking his own life when Thomas
was just a boy. Professor Biesenthal (Fritz Weaver) encourages Thomas to tread
lightly and invest himself objectively on a topic he has no personal
investment. Thomas takes Biesenthal’s suggestion under advisement – then does
precisely what he wants. At almost forty, Dustin Hoffman was decidedly much too
old to play a college student, but remarkably manages to pull off
twenty-something rather convincingly. Meanwhile, Thomas’ brother, Doc is in
Paris, ostensibly for work. Doc has lied about being an executive for an oil
conglomerate. In actuality, he is an international man of mystery working for
Pete Janeway (William Devane) – a spy in a daisy chain that has been smuggling
secrets out of France. Numerous attempts are made on Doc’s life, including a
particularly brutal attack by Asian agent, Chen (James Wing Woo), who, posing
as a hotel staffer, tries to garrot Doc inside his suite.
But before any of these threads can
be properly investigated, Schlesinger gives us an unsettling prologue. Szell’s
brother (Ben Dova) is seen leaving a safety deposit box at a Brooklyn bank,
sneaking a small consignment of diamonds in a talcum powder tin to a
nondescript man waiting for him on the street. Confronted by a cantankerous old
bugger, Szell’s brother dies in a fiery auto accident, forcing Szell, who has
been in hiding somewhere in South America, to return to the U.S. in order to
retrieve the diamonds. (Aside: those familiar with TV’s Fantasy Island
1977-1984 will immediately recognize Mr. Roarke’s palatial tropical retreat
used herein as Szell’s South American hideaway: in actuality, Queen Anne
Cottage located in L.A. County Arboretum and Botanic Garden in Arcadia.)
While studying at the library,
Thomas becomes enamored with Elsa (Marthe Keller), a Swiss foreign exchange
student who makes every attempt to avoid his obvious glances and later
completely rid herself of his awkward introductions after he has deliberately
swiped one of her books as an excuse to follow her home. Elsa forewarns Thomas,
nothing will come of their burgeoning ‘friendship’. But shortly thereafter, the
two become romantically involved. While strolling through Central Park, the
couple is assaulted by Szell’s henchmen, Erhard (Marc Lawrence) and Karl
(Richard Bright). In the meantime, Doc tells his contact, Janeway that he is
returning to the U.S. to stay with Thomas. Learning of Thomas’ mugging in the
park and of the new love in his life, Doc decides to take his brother and Elsa to
dinner at the Plaza Hotel. But the mood turns sullen and contemptible when Doc
exposes Elsa as a fraud by lying about having visited her home town, making up
places and people he supposedly met while on business there. She pretends to
know the same places and people. Doc then informs Elsa nothing he has said is
true. Elsa storms out of the dining room and Thomas chases after her.
In the meantime, Doc confronts
Szell at a prearranged meeting. He knows Szell’s men were behind Thomas’
mugging and Szell, realizing Doc is a liability, murders him with a knife
concealed up his trench coat sleeve. Doc stumbles back to Thomas’ apartment and
dies in his brother’s arms. The police are skeptical of Thomas. A short while
later, Thomas is visited by Pete Janeway who reveals the truth about Doc’s
involvement in an international spy operation. Thomas refuses to believe it at
first and orders Janeway out of his apartment. Not long thereafter, Thomas is
confronted by Karl and Erhard who bind and drag him to a remote warehouse where
Szell – a former dentist - proceeds to probe for answers by inflicting severe
pain by drilling into Thomas’ healthy teeth. Janeway bursts into the room,
presumably to rescue Thomas. But as the two men speed away from the warehouse
in Janeway’s getaway car, Janeway asks some probing questions of his own while
spinning a yarn about Szell having come to America to collect his consignment
of diamonds stolen from Jews murdered at Auschwitz. Thomas begins to suspect
Janeway of also working for Szell, a suspicion confirmed when Janeway drives
Thomas back to the warehouse, declaring to Szell and his men, he firmly believes
Thomas does not know anything.
Szell, still dissatisfied, proceeds
to drill into a fresh nerve in Thomas’ front tooth before ordering Karl and
Erhard to get rid of him and make it look like an accident. Instead, Thomas
manages a daring escape, his training as a long-distance runner coming in handy
as he streaks through the abandoned streets. Realizing Szell’s men will be
waiting for him back at his apartment, Thomas gets his neighbor, Melendez (Tito
Goya) and his street gang to break into his room to steal some clothes for him
to wear. He makes his way to Elsa’s place and she, in turn, drives them both to
an out of the way farmhouse she pretends belongs to one of her girlfriends. In
actuality, it is a stronghold owned by Szell’s late brother and the prearranged
rendezvous where Elsa has agreed to take Thomas so Szell’s men can finish the
job. Thomas has it out with Elsa who appears to have genuine affections for
him. Janeway, Karl and Erhard arrive. But Thomas holds Elsa hostage, forcing
the trio inside the house. After momentarily pretending to play along, Janeaway
kills Elsa and Thomas opens fire, shooting Janeway and his men dead.
In the meantime, Szell attempts an
appraisal of his diamonds at a Manhattan jewelers run by a former concentration
camp victim (Fred Struthman) who immediately identifies him. An elderly Jewish
woman (Estelle Omen) begins to shout Szell’s name in the street. Her cries go
unheeded by the crowd who think her mad and she is eventually struck by an
oncoming taxi. Szell is confronted by the jeweler and slits the man’s throat
before hurrying away. But only a few blocks from the crime scene, Szell is
confronted by Thomas who informs him at gunpoint that his henchmen are dead.
Thomas forces Szell into the Central Park waterworks. Szell attempts to dazzle his
captor with his consignment of diamonds. Instead, Thomas takes Szell’s stash,
tossing handfuls of the precious stones into the swirling waters below. He
tells Szell the only way he will be allowed to keep any of gems is by swallowing
all he can, forcing Szell to eat a few of the diamonds before hurling the
briefcase down a spiral staircase. Szell lunges to prevent the case from
falling into the water, impaling himself on his own knife and dying. His
revenge complete – though arguably, hardly sweet – Thomas skulks away and
tosses his gun into the reservoir.
Marathon Man’s finale is
ambiguous at best - another characteristic of 70’s film-making in general. At
least in hindsight, it also manages to play very much like a contemporary
Shakespearean tragedy. Hoffman and Olivier give ballast to Goldman’s screenplay
with Roy Scheider, Marthe Keller and William Devane providing exceptional
support. It’s a great cast, given great things to do and the movie is
stealthily directed by Schlesinger who creates unease, foreboding and
foreshadowing around every shadowy recess. For years, an incident on set has
been circulated as fact about the rather tempestuous relationship between
Olivier and Hoffman. The rumor was Hoffman confronted Olivier about his acting
style being ‘too big’ and Olivier, after observing Hoffman in preparation for
his role – using method techniques as his warm up – turned to Hoffman and said,
“Why don’t you just try acting instead?” In reality, Hoffman and Schlesinger
had concurred that, in a particular scene, Olivier was reaching too high to
achieve the desired effect. While, owing to the actor’s stature, Schlesinger
absolutely refused to encourage Olivier to do better, Hoffman – who equally
regarded Olivier as one of the greatest actors of any generation - offered a
polite ‘suggestion’ to Sir Laurence about the scene, at which point Olivier
graciously conceded he too felt as though he had not captured what the scene
required. Olivier actually thanked Hoffman with a congenial “Dear boy.” As
for Olivier’s comment about Hoffman trying ‘acting instead’ – while the truth
of the matter is the line was said, it was not uttered condescendingly and was,
in fact, preceded by some fairly jovial banter between the two co-stars about
acting in general. It was not an admonishment of Hoffman’s talents.
More confrontational – at least for
a time – was the relationship between Hoffman and Marthe Keller who spoke not a
word of English at the start of the shoot and had to learn virtually all of her
lines phonetically in order to play a scene. At one point, Hoffman goaded
Keller into playing the scene at the country house his way, forcing her to ramp
up her performance with some constant badgering. Much later, Keller would
regard this moment as ‘a gift’, but at the time it generated more than a few
tears of frustration and a mutual contempt, eventually to mellow. Marathon
Man is one of the best American thrillers ever made. After its New York
premiere, a sequence in which Doc murders a double agent was cut when a good
portion of the audience collectively walked out, declaring it as gruesomely
violent filth. There was even some contemplation amongst the heads of the
studio whether or not to excise Szell’s dental torture scene after it was
discovered audiences were turning their heads away from the screen and in some
cases, actually leaving the theater until the sequence ended, only to return to
see the rest of the picture. Thankfully,
cooler heads prevailed and this iconic, if cringe-worthy moment, remained
intact.
The violence in Marathon Man
seems tame by to today’s grotesque standards and affinity for ever-increasing
amounts of bloodshed splashed across our movie screens. And yet, the action in
the movie is no less potent for being restrained. There is nothing to touch the
bone-chilling suspense in the movie, particularly when Doc discovers that his
contact in the diamond smuggling operation (Jean Rougerie) has been garroted in
his box at the Paris opera, or the scene where Doc and Chen fight to the death,
ended when Doc snaps Chen’s neck. These are tour de force moments of sustained
sadism, the ferocity derived from Schlesinger’s brilliant staging and choices
later made in the editing process. In
the last analysis, Marathon Man endures as a spectacular thrill ride. It
really holds up and holds its own despite our ever-changing times. So, tell me…
“Is it safe?”
After a fairly impressive Blu-ray
release in 2013, part of Paramount’s distribution agreement with Warner Home
Video then, Paramount has – again – farmed out Marathon Man to
third-party distribution for its 4K UHD debut. Aside: I really do not get Paramount’s
executive decision-making, regarding their catalog releases. Some become ‘home
grown’ Paramount Presents…Blu-rays, some under the same banner in 4K and
Blu-ray, and others, just as worthy, get passed off to other companies to
circulate on physical media. Marathon Man arrives via Kino Lorber, a
company that, of late, has been aggressively marketing deep catalog in 4K with
stellar results…mostly. So, with regards to Marathon Man…is it safe,
or rather, is it good?
There was, I suspect, some
trepidation going into this release after the rather mediocre 4K of Death
Wish, another Paramount dump via Kino that yielded some pretty spotty
results in ultra-hi-def. The new 4K of Marathon Man has nothing to fear.
It has been sourced from a 35mm original camera negative and looks incredible.
Conrad Hall’s cinematography is dark, brooding and gritty. All of that gets
captured in 4K, with a grain-laden image possessing perfectly rich and thick
texture. The image is precise without being razor-sharp. Close-ups are
impressive in their fine detail. Medium and long shots look only marginally crisp
than they did on standard Blu-ray. Color saturation is superb. Flesh tones look
very natural. We get the same two audio
options that were previously available on the Blu-ray: DTS 5.1 and 2.0 theatrical
mono. Kino has shelled out for a new audio commentary from historians,
Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson. It’s ‘okay’, but a bit meandering and
loose in its content and analysis. Kino has also included rehearsal footage, a
trailer, TV spots and 2 vintage documentaries: one made to promote the
theatrical release, the other, a reflection piece from 2009 previously included
on Paramount’s DVD, and later, the Warner/Paramount Blu from 2013. Bottom line:
while the overall ‘improvements’ here are not as dramatic as some 4K releases
we’ve seen from Kino, they do create a more comprehensively film-like
presentation of this movie. Marathon Man comes recommended in 4K. Good,
solid work has been done here. Permit us to worship.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
3
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