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UNIVERSAL

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Alfred Hitchcock
Cast:
Sean Connery, Tippi Hedren, Diane Baker
Writing Credits:
Jay Presson Allen

Synopsis:
Mark marries Marnie although she is a habitual thief and has serious psychological problems.

MPAA:
Rated PG.

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audio:
English DTS-HD MA Monaural
French DTS Monaural
Japanese DTS Monaural
German DTS Monaural
Italian DTS Monaural
Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French
Japanese
German
Italian
Dutch
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Swedish
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French
Japanese
German
Italian
Dutch

Runtime: 131 min.
Price: $29.98
Release Date: 5/10/22

Bonus:
• "The Trouble With Marnie" Documentary
• “The Marnie Archives”
• Trailer
• Blu-ray Copy


PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM

EQUIPMENT
-LG OLED65C6P 65-Inch 4K Ultra HD Smart OLED TV
-Marantz SR7010 9.2 Channel Full 4K Ultra HD AV Surround Receiver
-Sony UBP-X700 4K Ultra HD Dolby Vision Blu-ray Player
-Chane A2.4 Speakers
-SVS SB12-NSD 12" 400-watt Sealed Box Subwoofer


RELATED REVIEWS


Marnie [4K UHD] (1964)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (January 29, 2023)

One pattern emerges when I watch the later work of Alfred Hitchcock: I seem to prefer his movies that go more for a horror vibe. As such, Psycho and The Birds act as my favorite Hitchcock flicks from his final decade and a half or so.

Add 1964's Marnie to the list of good Hitchcock movies that just don't do a lot for me. I find the film to be moderately compelling, but it seems more like stock Hitchcock and lacks much of the flair of his better efforts.

Marnie Edgar (‘Tippi’ Hedren) gets secretarial jobs that she uses as a way to eventually steal from her employers. She also reacts negatively to the attention of men and freaks out when she sees the color red.

Businessman Mark Rutland (Sean Connery) falls for Marnie and eventually gets her to marry him, but her off-putting behaviors persist. Mark needs to help Marnie work through their issues for their relationship to succeed.

One aspect I dislike about Marnie stems from the dime-store psychology it features. Plenty of movies utilize psychological themes in their stories, but few hinge so strongly on a Freudian point of view.

The whole tale revolves around the eventual reveal of Marnie's deep dark secret, one shown as the key to her problems. The entire thing gets built up so heavily that when the film reveals the revelation, it seems almost anti-climactic and predictable, and the fact that all of her issues and the things that trigger her "episodes" all clearly relate back to this one event stretches credulity.

The psychoanalytic bent of Marnie also means that we're "treated" to scenes in which Mark runs Marnie through a series of psychological exercises such as free association. As I later learned in this disc's documentary, the film was supposed to include a psychiatrist character.

Instead, Marnie incorporates those segments into Mark's role to make the part more appealing to stars. Unfortunately, that makes for some absurd viewing as Connery tries to play amateur psychologist and figure out what's wrong with Marnie.

I couldn’t figure out why he cared so much. Yeah, Hedren's a babe, and I guess some guys like a challenge, but Marnie exhibits very few positive characteristics other than her beauty.

The fact she's a raving nutbag should have been enough to scare Mark away. I guess the aspiring shrink in him couldn't resist the experience.

It doesn't help that Hedren offers a pretty bad performance. Marnie goes through a wide variety of emotional states and Hedren simply isn’t up to the task.

Hedren did perfectly well for herself in The Birds, but that role required little from her other than icy beauty and abject fear. When required to flesh out a performance and create a complicated person, Hedren can't do it, and Marnie comes across as little more than peeved most of the time.

Connery seems decent as Mark, though his performance also lacks complexity. He appears somewhat stuck in Bond mode and doesn't do much with the emotional range needed for the part.

Connery remains stoic and suave throughout the film. Actually, this helps Marnie in an odd way: since we know Bond loves a challenge, we can better understand 007 pursuing this babe than we could accept a more fully-realized normal person doing it.

In addition to the less-than-convincing performances from the leads, Marnie simply runs much too long. The film goes for 130 minutes, which is at least 30 too many.

The story would seem redundant in the best of circumstances - over and over we see how screwed up Marnie is - but the extended length makes the reinforcement of these points even more tiresome. I think a shorter, tighter cut would have allowed the film to become more compelling.

Though I'm not sure how much more interesting it could be, just because all of the "plot twists" seem telegraphed. I don't want to discuss them in case they may spoil it for you, but we easily figure out the background to Marnie's various aversions - the color red, men, loud noises - which makes the climax less stimulating and revealing.

Hitchcock does little to turn the story more exciting. A few scenes appear well-staged - one in which Marnie tries to sneak out of a building past a cleaning woman delights - but most use such obvious and overbearing symbolism that they seem more like imitation Hitchcock than the real thing.

Despite all these criticisms, I still find Marnie to be watchable and mildly entertaining. However, it clearly pales in comparison with Hitchcock's better work.


The Disc Grades: Picture B/ Audio B-/ Bonus B-

Marnie appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. While not a visual showcase, the image held up pretty well.

Sharpness varied but usually worked fine. The majority of the “softness” resulted from Hitchcock’s affection for “glamour photography” when it came to leading ladies.

This meant shots of Hedren became the only real issues in terms of definition, and as noted, those occurred intentionally. Otherwise, the movie boasted pretty good delineation.

No issues with jagged edges or moiré effects materialized, and I saw no edge haloes. Print flaws failed to become an issue, and grain seemed heavy but natural.

Colors tended toward a brown orientation, but other hues like greens and reds also showed up along the way. While the hues didn’t dazzle, the image replicated them in a positive manner, and HDR added emphasis to the tones.

Blacks were fairly dense, while shadows showed appealing clarity. HDR brought extra emphasis to whites and contrast. The nature of the source left this as a “B” but I thought the 4K portrayed the movie pretty well.

At least the movie’s DTS-HD MA monaural soundtrack held up pretty well over the last 58 years. Despite some awkwardly dubbed lines, dialogue sounded fairly natural and full.

The lines remained clear and intelligible at all times. Bernard Herrmann's score appeared crisp and bright, and effects were similarly accurately defined. At no point did the audio surpass era-based expectations, but the mix worked fine.

How does the 4K UHD compare to the Blu-ray version? Audio seemed identical.

As for visuals, the 4K UHD offered an enormous improvement over the messy Blu-ray. It became better defined, more vivid and more natural, so anticipate a major step up in quality.

As we head to extras, we open with a documentary called The Trouble With Marnie. This piece runs for 58 minutes, 25 seconds and incorporates comments from cast members ‘Tippi’ Hedren, Diane Baker, and Louise Latham, rejected screenwriters Joseph Stefano and Evan Hunter, final screenwriter Jay Presson Allen, daughter Pat Hitchcock O'Connell, production designer Robert Boyle, makeup artist Howard Smit, unit manager Hilton Green, Hitchcock historian Robin Wood, Bernard Herrman biographer Steven C. Smith, and Hitchcock fan/filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich.

This is a fine piece that succinctly and entertainingly summarizes the production of Marnie. The participants offer a lot of great information and anecdotes, and they all appear candid about the film and are not afraid to criticize it.

I found it most valuable to hear from screenwriters Stefano and Hunter, since their work got left behind, but the entire program includes a lot of strong material. Frankly, I enjoyed the documentary more than I liked the film itself.

The Marnie Archives presents a collection of movie posters plus production and publicity stills. Unlike the usual "stillframe" pieces, this one presents the material in a running nine-minute, one-second video montage that features Herrmann's score along with the images. It's a nice series of elements that deserves a look.

Marnie's theatrical trailer appears. Like many other Hitchcock previews, this four-minute, 45-second clip is quite entertaining and amusing. Hitchcock's ads were often much more clever and witty than others, and this one's no exception.

Marnie offers a mildly provocative experience but doesn't live up to the standards Hitchcock established in prior films. It’s better than some of Hitch’s subsequent movies but it’s a steep drop from its predecessors. As for the 4K UHD, it offers relatively good picture and audio as well as an informative documentary. This becomes the best version of the film to hit home video.

Note that this 4K UHD version of Marnie can be found on its own or as part of a 5-film set called “Alfred Hitchcock Classics Collection”. This also includes Saboteur, Shadow of a Doubt, The Trouble With Harry, and Family Plot.

To rate this film, visit the DVD review of MARNIE

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