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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesAre you looking for anything regarding insight into his novels? You won't find it here. Mantegna is in such a hurry to get to the incident in which Mailer stabbed his second wife, which he followed by spending 17 days at Bellvue, that all we learn about "The Naked And The Dead" is that he had to use the word "fug" instead of "fuck" and that the follow-ups "Barbary Shore" and "The Deer Park" failed to match the acclaim and sales of his first outing, leading to a decade-long break from fiction writing. In fact, most of his writing is only touched upon perfunctorily, with very brief, not even Wiki-worthy mentions of when they were written, and what they tackled. More time is spent on the story about how Mailer was pissed off that he was invited to Arthur Miller's house only to find out that Marilyn Monroe wasn't there, than on his actual book "Marilyn." The most space is given to Mailer's last novel, "The Castle In The Forest," mostly likely because Mantegna was able to get a pretty good clip from "The Charlie Rose Show" where he talks about it.
But Mantegna's most exploitative turn is spending a good chunk of the film on a excerpt from Mailer's 1970 curio "Maidstone," the third of four films he directed. He focuses on an improvised scene in which Rip Torn hits Mailer in the head with a hammer, angrily surprising the writer who bites a chunk out of the actor's ear as they fight on the ground, while Mailer's ex-wives (cast in the film as well) and children look on in horror. But going one step further, Mantegna plays the scene back to one of the ex-wives and films her reaction. To what end? We have no idea. The only other time Mantegna dips into Mailer's movie career is to talk about his last film "Tough Guys Don't Dance," with the only clip he chooses to show (straight faced) being the viral favorite Worst Line Reading Ever. How did Mailer's filmmaking inform his writing or vice versa? Don't ask because you won't find out.
"Norman Mailer: The American" is on DVD now.
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1 Comment
No | May 12, 2012 9:15 PM
The only thing that I ever read and finished of Mailer was his easy The White Negro. The original hipster article.