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Nov 22nd 2011, 15:53
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offlineCarbon Based Lifeform
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OSCAR THE GROUCH SEZ:  Michelle Williams doesn't look anything like Marilyn Monroe!

Nov 22nd 2011, 15:58
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offlineLKMOSCAR
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Quote by babypook

^^

"...solid contender for the win."

At this point, it doesnt seem she is given much chance for the win. But we know that momentum can switch on a dime. It would be just so great if by the end, all five actors are given the same percentage of chance!

One can dream. But it wouldnt surprise me to see Williams heading to the podium.
The category has a lot of possibilities (and I could see a case made for Davis, Close and Streep). With such a strong field, I do think this probably helps Streep.

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Nov 22nd 2011, 16:06
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offlinedannyboy.
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I am getting the feeling Michelle Williams will be the real darkhorse in the race.. Streep, Davis, Close may all seem like frontrunners, but I have the feeling Williams may end up winning it in the end.
Nov 22nd 2011, 16:35
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onlineMiss Frost
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While I have no doubt Williams will win an Oscar (I actually think she shouldve won in 2005). I dont think this is the role, she will be lucky to get in over her competition. The film doesnt seem like it will be a box office success either with its limited screening. When all is said and done I think the race will come down to Streep and Davis. I will have to wait and see with Close, since nothing has come up that makes her a major player to even get nominated.
Nov 22nd 2011, 18:32
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offlineDaniel Montgomery
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My Review

... I can’t comment on the actual week young, wide-eyed Colin Clark spent with Monroe while she filmed The Prince and the Showgirl, but the character in the film, played by Eddie Redmayne, doesn’t seem to understand her very well at all. That the film idealizes their relationship misses what really seems to have been at the heart of Monroe’s loneliness and isolation ... MY FULL REVIEW
siskel ebert
Nov 22nd 2011, 19:19
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offlineLKMOSCAR
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Roger Ebert's review (3 and 1/2 stars):

http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111121/REVIEWS/111129994


By some tantalizing alchemy, Marilyn Monroe imprinted an idea in the minds of much of the human race around 1950, and for many, that idea is still there. In the early 1950s, my friends and I required only one word to express it: marilynmonroe. It wasn't a name. It was a summation of all we yearned and guessed about some kind of womanly ideal. Sex didn't seem to have much to do with it. It was more a form of devotion, a recognition of how she embodied vulnerability and sweetness and hope and fear.

The success of "My Week With Marilyn" centers on the success of Michelle Williams in embodying the role. With the blond hair, the red lipstick and the camera angles, she looks something like Monroe, although she's more petite. What she has is the quality that was most appealing: She makes you want to hug her, not have sex with her. Monroe wasn't bold in her sexuality, not like her contemporaries Jane Russell or Brigitte Bardot. She held it tremulously in her grasp, as if not knowing how to set it down without damaging it.

"My Week With Marilyn" is based on the true story of a young man named Colin Clark, who talked his way into a job on "The Prince and the Showgirl" (1957), a movie being directed in England by Laurence Olivier, the nearest thing to royalty among British actors. For one troubled week, while Monroe's husband, the playwright Arthur Miller, was absent in Paris and production was on hiatus, she asked the worshipful, 23-year-old kid to join her at a getaway cottage.

She was 30. They were alone. One night, they went skinny-dipping in the moonlight. That's about it. There's a suggestion they had sex, but the movie is coy. The way I read it, it was about a gift. Aware of what marilynmonroe meant to someone like Colin Clark, grateful for his sympathy and protectiveness, in need of company, she gave herself. Apparently she had a way of sometimes taking mercy like that.

For serious relationships, she preferred alpha males: Joe DiMaggio, Arthur Miller, and by some accounts, Robert Mitchum and John and Bobby Kennedy. She admired their brains. She was smart but had no confidence. She was in search of mentors and father figures. In her acting, she fell into the orbit of Method guru Lee Strasberg, and his second wife, Paula. She brought Paula to England and seemed incapable of making a move without her. This aroused the anger of Olivier, who despised the Method and considered acting a job to train for and work at without any bloody nonsense.

Gifted with this week, Colin Clark recorded it in a diary, which later became a book. Diaries ran in the family. His older brother, Alan Clark, wrote one of the greatest of 20th century political diaries. For Colin Clark, the week with Marilyn wove a spell from which he was never freed.

This film is a fragile construction. There is no plot to speak of. The character of Colin Clark (Eddie Redmayne) is surrounded by many others who have more presence and charisma: Olivier, played by Kenneth Branagh with barely concealed fury that his own crush on Monroe was impossible; Arthur Miller (Dougray Scott), with his deep American accent, disengaged from Marliyn's world; Paula Strasberg (Zoe Wanamaker), fixated on Monroe, deaf and blind to others.

Julia Ormond plays Vivien Leigh, Olivier's wife, who sees through him, weighs the threat from Monroe and sees he isn't the equal of a Miller or DiMaggio. Judi Dench is Dame Sybil Thorndike, also acting royalty, who patiently explains to Olivier that it doesn't matter if Monroe can't act, because when she's onscreen, nothing else matters. And Toby Jones as the press agent, who is crass, belligerent and irrelevant. Redmayne is well-cast as Colin Clark. He plays him as young, brash but somehow unworldly, with a helplessness that may remind Monroe of herself.

The movie seems to be a fairly accurate re-creation of the making of a film at Pinewood Studios at that time. It hardly matters. What happens during the famous week hardly matters. What matters is the performance by Michelle Williams. She evokes so many Marilyns, public and private, real and make-believe. We didn't know Monroe, but we believe she must have been something like his. We're probably looking at one of this year's Oscar nominees.

We are such stuff that dreams are made on, and our lives are rounded by a little sleep.

Nov 23rd 2011, 10:19
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offlineCarlo
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Is there any official word about the catgeory placement at the Golden Globes? Drama or Comedy?

If comedy I think Michelle is a lock for the win. But from the trailer it looks more like a drama..
Nov 23rd 2011, 10:22
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offlinebabypook
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Hasnt this film already been relegated to  'comedy' ?

The Sunne in Splendour; I prefer my Roses White

Nov 23rd 2011, 11:28
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offlineTV12
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Does anyone know if Julia Ormond is showy enough to warrant any attention? She is playing VIVIEN LEIGH after all, in a time where she was affected by her bipolar disorder.

The best album of the year so far. "Past Gone" is the best song of the year as well. Check out Mike Stud's debut album on iTunes.

Nov 23rd 2011, 11:35
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offlineLKMOSCAR
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Fine LA Times review (rave for Williams - calls her performance a revelation)

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-my-week-with-marilyn-20111123,0,4909569.story

Movie review: 'My Week With Marilyn' Michelle Williams is a revelation as movie icon Marilyn Monroe in a film based on an account of the drama behind the shooting of 'The Prince and the Showgirl.'

By Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times Film Critic

November 23, 2011


"My Week With Marilyn,"
starring Michelle Williams as the blond bombshell, is as mercurial a film as its subject, Marilyn Monroe, was a star. It's lush and vibrant when Williams is onscreen, mostly fussy British discontent when she's not.

Whatever the flaws, the truth is nothing else much matters since Williams is Marilyn, and Marilyn had a way of outshining everything around her. It is magnetic to watch the actress move seamlessly between the many faces of Monroe, the movie star she became, the wounded girl she was growing up. Capturing those changing moods was challenging enough — a sort of internal on-off switch was required. But it is in revealing the complicated enigma of Monroe's character, the intelligence that was always lurking behind the sexy pouts and poses, the unquenchable need for reassurance, that Williams is divine.

The story is a true one, based on the diaries of the late arts documentary filmmaker Colin Clark. It was directed by Simon Curtis, a veteran of the U.K.'s classier TV-movie stream, with screenwriter Adrian Hodges, who co-wrote 1994's "Tom & Viv," adapting. The week in question is slight, a few minor days in the life of a megastar, and the director treats it as such.

Clark, played with great charm and cheek by Eddie Redmayne, chanced to have a working flirtation with Monroe in 1956 when he was 23. She was in London to film "The Prince and the Showgirl" opposite the great British thespian Laurence Olivier in hopes Hollywood would take her more seriously. Clark was the film's third assistant director, a grand title for his job as Olivier's gofer. For a few days, he became Monroe's chief ally on and off the set, and he did not forget a breathless moment of his time with the movie star or the details of the movie-making.

"My Week" moves between Monroe's friction with Olivier ( Kenneth Branagh) during production, her struggle with depression away from the set and the machinations of the small circle of sycophants always around her. A clearly smitten Clark becomes her shoulder to lean on, a trusted advisor, and her co-conspirator in escaping, at least briefly, the star machine.

The whole notion of "movie star" as we think of it now — all the adoration and attention, some welcome, some not — was just beginning to congeal in a significant way back then. Using Clark's observations, that cultural shift almost comes to life in the film — the claustrophobic crush of fans, the press of the celebrity press and her own ambivalence about it.

The movie Olivier and Monroe were working on in '56 was a light comedy. Curtis gives us a faithful representation of a film that wasn't very good even then. Its most memorable scene — the showgirl caught unaware in a bouncy dance — is as daffy and delightful here as it was in the original. But as soon as Monroe's out of sight, the film within the film turns tedious and flat.

A jowly Branagh plays an overbearing Olivier, who is playing an overbearing prince of a fictional Balkan kingdom in "The Prince and the Showgirl" — strangely, he's better as the prince than as the legendary actor. In contrast, Judi Dench is portraying the acclaimed stage actress Dame Sybil Thorndike, who is cast as the addled Queen Dowager — and any way you cut it, her moments are among the brightest in either film.

There are all the other tension-inducing players in Monroe's life — the churlish new husband, Arthur Miller ( Dougray Scott); the antsy business partner, Milton Greene ( Dominic Cooper); the brown-nosing acting coach, Paula (Zoë Wanamaker). But they are brushed past so lightly you wonder if it might have been better to drop them entirely.

With all those personalities and Olivier such a pain, you can't blame Monroe for wanting to escape. And with Clark's help, she does, and this is when the film is at its most endearing. A week, and one particularly enchanting day, that begins with the royal library and ends with a skinny dip in the Thames. It gives us a rare glimpse of Monroe trying on an ordinary life for a change. But like Clark, it's only a brief flirtation; she simply can't resist the affection of a crowd.

Catching all of those light and dark shades is director of photography Ben Smithard ("The Damned United"). He shoots Williams like Monroe — as if the camera cannot get enough of her, as if there is no bad side. He gives Redmayne almost equal treatment, so that you understand why Monroe would be drawn to Clark, would want to bask for a while in his schoolboy crush. Redmayne manages to look smitten but not silly, adoringly attentive but not cloying.

For Williams, despite a string of exceptional performances, "Blue Valentine" and "Brokeback Mountain" among them, it was a risky gambit taking on such an iconic star, one who had such luminous power on screen, such a heartbreaking story off. One that certainly paid off. It's hard to imagine a more unforgettable Monroe than the one Williams has given us — except for the original, of course.




We are such stuff that dreams are made on, and our lives are rounded by a little sleep.

Nov 23rd 2011, 11:58
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offlineDaniel Montgomery
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Quote by tuckerv
Does anyone know if Julia Ormond is showy enough to warrant any attention? She is playing VIVIEN LEIGH after all, in a time where she was affected by her bipolar disorder.


Ormond only has a scant few scenes in the film and none of them have much meat on them. She has less screentime than Judi Dench, and even Dench's role is probably too brief and understated to get any awards traction.
siskel ebert
Nov 23rd 2011, 12:00
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offlineAdam Waldowski
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Not to mention Ormond is the least convincing Vivien Leigh imaginable.
Nov 23rd 2011, 12:05
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offlineCarlo
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It seems there's a lot love for Williams performance.

At Metacritic the movie it's still at 67, but at the RottenTomatoes it's at a stronger than expected 85 % fresh.
Nov 23rd 2011, 12:21
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offlineDaniel Montgomery
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I'm surprised the Rotten Tomatoes score is so high, but not surprised about MetaCritic. When first reactions were coming out and then I saw the film, I guessed reactions to the film would be mixed but that admiration for Michelle Williams would push the film into mild green territory (60-70), and that's where it has ended up so far.

If the consensus for the film were worse, I'd consider lowering Michelle Williams in my predictions, but the film is certainly well-liked enough to win her Best Actress, about on par with "La Vie en Rose" and better liked than a few other films that have recently won Best Actress (Kate Winslet in "The Reader," Sandra Bullock in "The Blind Side").

The Cotillard parallel might end up being close to how this race goes down: a sexy ingenue playing a real-life icon in a so-so film vs. a beloved, Oscar-winning screen vet who hasn't won in years (Julie Christie then, Meryl Streep now).
siskel ebert
Nov 23rd 2011, 12:27
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offlineLKMOSCAR
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I'm honestly surprised the film is above 60 on metacritic (I was expecting something in the mid-fiftties).

We are such stuff that dreams are made on, and our lives are rounded by a little sleep.