I am not usually drawn to dysfunctional people. I was 10 years old when this account of Marilyn Monroe’s life was playing out and to tell you the truth I was much more enamored with Elvis Presley. Both Marilyn and Elvis enjoyed or hated their lives depending on who you’re asking.
Having recently graduated from Oxford, Colin Clark sets out to make his way in the Film Industry. After much persistence, he is given the position of 3rd Assistant to the Director on a Marilyn Monroe film originally called The Sleeping Prince (later The Prince and the Showgirl). He basically follows the director around and does his bidding. The awestruck Colin finds himself so drawn to Marilyn that he becomes her self-appointed protector.
Sir Laurence Olivier, played by the marvelous Kenneth Branagh, is the Director of the film and also the lead actor. Larry is intrigued by Marilyn but finds her extremely difficult to work with. There is some eluding to her drinking and drug habits but for the most part her unpredictability is chalked up to stardom. Judi Dench is wonderful as Dame Sybil Thorndike who seems to always be trying to ease the tension on the set.
As the title implies, Colin (Eddie Redmayne) and Marilyn (Michelle Wiliams) become fast friends and even more for a time. Marilyn is married to playwright, Arthur Miller (Dougrary Scott), but during this week they argue, separate and he goes home, leaving Marilyn with a void in her life. Colin fills that for her.
As I said, dysfunctional doesn’t really work for me, but in this case I look at her life and wonder if she’s dealing with a full deck. I ‘get’ that she has abandonment issues. When Colin asks her about the pictures by her bed she tells him, “That’s my Mommy. She bought me a white piano right before they took her away to the insane asylum.” The other picture was of Abraham Lincoln and she says she never knew her father so Lincoln was as good as anyone.
It may sound like I didn’t like My Week with Marilyn. I actually liked it very much for plethora of reasons. The acting was credible, the scenery enchanting, the characters complex. Simon Curtis did a brilliant job as Director. I even think it was cast well.
I’m still trying to figure out if Marilyn Monroe was delusional, drugged or just plain spoiled. She used people and discarded them. She complained about her life but wouldn’t change it. When Colin asked her to give it all up, be with him and be happy she replied, “I am happy.” Did she have the strength to change or was she so addicted to the worship because of her abandonment issues that she just didn’t want to change her life? We will never really know. What My Week with Marilyn does shows us is glimpse into the private life of the breathtaking Marilyn. Who was the real Marilyn Monroe? Free-spirit? Child? Or the sex-kitten that came out at Oxford when she says to Colin, “Shall I be her?”
Sir Laurence summed up her acting by saying, “She had no training, no craft, just pure instinct and she remained brilliant in spite of me.” I highly recommend you rent or buy My Week with Marilyn and let me know what you think at chastings@rockcliff.com.
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