Marathon Man is a 1976 thriller film with impeccable credentials and an enduring reputation, yet until recently, I'd never seen it. I'm glad to have repaired this omission, and I felt that, nearly forty years on, the film stands up very well. It's gripping from start to finish, while its violence, rather controversial at the time, remains frightening.
Dustin Hoffman plays a history student who has never quite got over his father's suicide. He is something of a loner, and when he is not studying, he practises marathon running. He falls for a glamorous fellow student, played by Marthe Keller, and they become lovers. When he introduces her to his older brother (Roy Scheider), however, there is some tension between the pair. Is the girl playing a game of some sort? And why were the pair of them mugged by two men in suits while out in the park?
What we know - but Hoffman's character doesn't - is that the brother is not an oil executive but some kind of secret agent. And he is mixed up with people who, for whatever reason, are keeping a close eye on a former Nazi (Laurence Olivier, no less) who has emerged from hiding in South America following the death of his own brother. When the Nazi comes to New York, things turn very unpleasant indeed.
The screenplay was written by William Goldman, and based on his own novel. Goldman is a gifted writer, and his expertise shows. So does that of the director, the estimable John Schlesinger. Really, this is a good example of how to write a thriller that grabs you from the start and never lets go. Today, writers such as Lee Child do this equally well. If you enjoyed Jack Reacher (as I did) then it's extremely likely that you'll enjoy Marathon Man. Though I suspect many readers of this blog will have watched it years before I belatedly caught up with it..
4 comments:
When I was in the Navy on the carrier USS KITTY HAWK, I had to make regular trips to the dentist for extensive work. The dentist -- thinking he was funny -- would begin each session, with implements of torture in his hand, by saying, "Is it safe"? I was not amused. (Note: Olivier was superb in the film!)
'Is it safe?' as repeated by Olivier is a chilling moment in this film - put a whole generation off going to the dentists but gave us a catchphrase...
Yes, easily the most memorable moment in the film!
The famous set story of Hoffman and Olivier:
Hoffman's character was supposed to look like he had stayed awake for three nights. Dustin, being a method actor, decided to stay up for three nights in real life in order for it to look more realistic. When he came to the set, Laurence Olivier asked him why he looked so tired and Dustin told him. Then Olivier paused for a moment, then said, "Try acting, dear boy...it's much easier."
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