Blonde
Came out; 2022
Time; 2 hours 47 Minutes
Watched: Netflix
Rated: NC-17 for some sexual content
IMDB Rating; 5.5/10
Caution; Spoiler Alert
Staring.
Ana de Armas as Norma Jeane
Lily Fisher as Young Norma Jeane
Xavier Samuel as Cass Chaplin
Evan Williams as Eddy Robinson Jr
Adrien Brody as The Playwright
Story Line.
From director Andrew Dominik, and based on the bestselling novel by Joyce Carol Oates, 'Blonde' boldly reimagines the life of one of Hollywood's most enduring icons, Marilyn Monroe. From her volatile childhood as Norma Jeane, through her rise to stardom and romantic entanglements, 'Blonde' blurs the lines of fact and fiction to explore the widening split between her public and private selves
Thoughts:
There was so much unnecessary nudity in this movie. To be clear, I have no issues with nudity but there is a time and a place and 9/10 times it was unnecessary in this.
I did really like that they went into her childhood and what she went through. They made her look like a blonde bimbo would do anything for fame after her start.
Things were so different in the time when she was alive, it's sad to think that women lived that way.
Although I feel she was white washed for this, Ana de Armas did an excellent job at playing her, she had the look and the voice
CAUTION; Spoiler Alert
As
a young girl, Norma Jeane Mortenson (Ana De Armas) grows up raised by
her mentally unstable mother Gladys (Julianne Nicholson). On her
seventh birthday in 1933, she is given a framed picture of a man
Gladys claims is her father. Later that night, a fire breaks out in
the Hollywood Hills, and Gladys drives Norma Jeane up there, claiming
that her father lives there, but is forced to go back home at the
orders of the police. An enraged Gladys tries to drown Norma Jeane in
the bathtub when she asks about her father but lets her go. Gladys
says that Norma's father left Gladys as he didn't want Norma to be
born. Norma Jeane escapes to her neighbor's house, who promises she
will be fine. A few days later, Norma Jeane is sent to a foster home
while Gladys is admitted to a mental hospital, having been declared
unfit to raise a child. Norma is adamant that she is not an orphan
yet is forced into the foster home.
By
the 1940s, Norma Jeane becomes a pin-up girl under the stage name of
"Marilyn Monroe," appearing on magazine covers and
calendars. While trying to break into the acting industry, she is
sexually assaulted by film studio president Mr. Z (David Warshofsky).
She is severely traumatized and hides her angst by pretending that
the reality only happened to her character named Marilyn. In 1950,
she auditions for the role of Nell in Don't Bother to Knock. The
audition goes poorly after she breaks down and leaves in tears, but
she impresses the casting director enough to give her the
part.
Norma visits her mother in hospital after 10 yrs, but
she refuses to recognize her. Norma is under contract by the studio,
where allegedly her father used to work. She wants her mother to
confirm it, as she could not find anything in the studio files that
contained her "father's" photo. As her acting career
steadily rises, she meets Charles "Cass" Chaplin Jr.
(Xavier Samuel) and Edward G. "Eddy" Robinson Jr. (Evan
Williams), with whom she begins a Polyamorous relationship. Norma
Jeane lands her breakout role in 1953 with Niagara, but after she is
spotted in public with Cass and Eddy, she is told by a studio head to
limit her appearances with them in public, which upsets her because
she feels like her persona of Marilyn is just a role and not her true
self.
Norma Jeane becomes pregnant, much to her delight, but
eventually decides to have an abortion out of fear that the child
might inherit Gladys' mental issues. However, on the day of the
appointment, she changes her mind, but it is too late. Marilyn is a
sensation, but Norma is getting paid $5000 per movie, while her
co-stars are paid $100K per movie. She feels insulted.
She
later meets Joe DiMaggio (Patrick Brennan), a retired athlete who
sympathizes with her when she expresses her desire to leave Hollywood
and become a more serious actress in New York City. As she films
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, she receives a letter from a man claiming
to be her father (Tygh Runyan). Norma Jeane feels disconnected from
her onscreen performance at the film's premiere, saying it is not
her. She returns to her hotel room, having been told that someone is
waiting for her. Expecting it to be her father, she instead finds
Joe, who asks to marry her, which she accepts reluctantly.
Norma
Jeane and Joe's marriage sours when Cass and Eddy give Joe some nude
publicity pictures of her, which enrages Joe so much that he hits her
and demands that she refuse to do The Seven Year Itch out of
principle. However, she still goes through with filming, doing the
famous publicity stunt with the white dress. When she gets home, a
drunken Joe screams and gets physically violent with her. She
divorces him shortly after.
In 1955, Norma Jeane auditions for
the Broadway play Magda, written by renowned playwright Arthur
Miller. During a read-through, her performance impresses everyone but
Arthur. He eventually warms up to her when she gives him some
insightful character analysis (Magda was Arthur's love and Norma
points out that from the play it sounds like Magda was illiterate.
Arthur's eyes light up as the truth). Norma Jeane and Arthur marry
and move to Maine, where she lives a happy life with him and becomes
pregnant. However, when walking on the beach one day with a platter
of food, she trips and miscarries. Distraught, she returns to acting
soon after.
While filming Some Like It Hot, Norma Jeane
becomes more uncontrollable and mentally disturbed: she is
overwhelmed by the constant press attention, feels like she is being
made a joke of, has frequent outbursts on set, especially toward
director Billy Wilder (Ravil Isyanov), and grows increasingly distant
from Arthur. To cope with her stress, she begins taking pills.
By
1962, Norma Jeane has become dependent on drugs and alcohol. FBI
agents take her to meet the president (Caspar Phillipson) (the 35th
President of the United States), who forces her to Fellate him.
Already dazed and drugged on pills, she begins to wonder if this is
what being 'Marilyn Monroe' has led to, and she also hallucinates
having another abortion and is sent back to her home in Los Angeles.
She learns from Eddy on the phone that Cass has died and has left
something to her, which she refuses to see at first but is convinced
by Eddy, who sends it in a package in the mail. Cass' memento turns
out to be the stuffed tiger plush that she had as a child, and the
package also contains a letter where he confesses that the letters
that Norma Jeane has been receiving, supposedly from her father, were
actually from him.
Shattered by the revelation, Norma Jeane
overdoses on barbiturates; as she dies on her bed, she has a vision
of her father welcoming her to the afterlife.
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