Martin Eden (2019)

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Martin Eden: Directed by Pietro Marcello. With Luca Marinelli, Jessica Cressy, Vincenzo Nemolato, Marco Leonardi. Martin Eden struggles to rise above his destitute, proletarian circumstances through an intense and passionate pursuit of self-education, hoping to achieve a place among the literary elite.

“IN BRIEF: A pretentious artistic approach undercuts a strong story.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eJIMu0026#39;S REVIEW: (MILDLY RECOMMENDED) Martin Eden is an artistic muddle of style over substance. Loosely based on Jack Londonu0026#39;s semi-autobiographical novel, Martin Eden told the story of working class struggles and oppression set in the early 1900u0026#39;s. Director Pietro Marcello has taken that novel and transported that story in place and time: The title character now lives in Italy, although the time frame is purposely confusing. It seems to take place somewhere in the mid-20th century, although the anachronistic fashions and technological devices collide frequently to raise some doubt.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003ePlot details remain the same as Mr. Marcello follows the same basis premise of the book. A working class man searches for a better life. Doing menial jobs, he yearns for a better education and wants to become a published writer. Martinu0026#39;s ultimate goal is important to him, as he has fallen in love with a rich and pampered upper-class girl from a strictly bourgeois family. Martin meets other figures that spur him into action during his class struggle for success, with tirades against socio-economical injustice and protests about socialism, democracy, unions, and the rights of individuals being freely bantered about throughout the film.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWe follow Martinu0026#39;s journey with high interest and remain captivated by the film despite constant cross-cutting of archival footage that adds atmosphere and further confusion. The handling of these jarring images is innovative yet infuriating as it addles the moviegoing audience. Mr. Marcellou0026#39;s vision upends the essential storytelling and overcomplicates his movie with these flourishes. (At one point, I wondered if these cinematic intrusions were a political statement of societyu0026#39;s ills, Martinu0026#39;s actual written stories brought to life, or just heavy-handled historical documentations from that century…I still donu0026#39;t know. What I do know is that the overall effect remains jarring and undercuts the narrative.)u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThrough 2/3 of the film, this reviewer was intrigued with Mr. Marcellou0026#39;s bold approach to the material despite the aforementioned major flaws in his execution. But the last third of the film makes absolutely no sense. Leaps of logic are everywhere. Once the ship literally sinks (and it does), the story bounces ahead to an entirely different Martin, one with dyed blonde shoulder-length hair and rotting front teeth who is cynical about life but still rants against the inequities of wealth and power. The final shot negates everything before it. (Again I wondered if I skipped a reel or two due to the lack of continuity.)u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe cast is uniformly strong, especially Luca Marinelli in the title role. His 50u0026#39;s matinee idol good looks create a likable hero and the actor is excellent in his well-defined role. Jessica Cressey makes an attractive love interest, although their relationship is predictable in its conclusion. Adding fine support in their supporting roles are Carmen Pommella and Carlo Cecchi.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAll in all, Martin Eden is too artsy for its own good. It forgets its own working class roots. Less artistic license would have delivered a stronger film. Ostentatiousness reigns. When style overrides the story, one questions its real purpose. The film puts on airs that only the bourgeois could love. Martin would have railed against it. (GRADE: C+)”

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