| Jack Nicholson, Bruce Dern, Ellen
Burstyn , Julia Anne Robinson, Scatman Crothers, Charles Lavine.
Dreams die hard in wintry Atlantic City in Bob Rafelson's downbeat
character drama. Depressive deejay David Staebler (Jack Nicholson)
tends to his grandfather as he philosophizes on late-night Philadelphia
talk radio. When his huckster older brother Jason (Bruce Dern) calls
out of the blue one day, David travels to Atlantic City to see what
his latest easy money scheme is. Along with his former beauty queen
companion Sally (Ellen Burstyn) and her pretty stepdaughter Jessica
(Julia Anne Robinson), Jason plans to open a resort on a small Hawaiian
island, insisting to an initially skeptical David that the deal
is as good as done. David plays along but, as he learns the reality
of the situation, tries to talk some sense into Jason. Jason and
his women will have none of it, leading to a tragic lesson about
the cost of superficial values like beauty and wealth, and the limits
of brotherly love. Rafelson's follow-up to his 1970 hit Five Easy
Pieces once again questions American myths of success, with one
brother unwilling to come to earth to realize his dreams and the
other unable to do much beyond talk about his inertia to an unseen
radio audience. With Five Easy Pieces star Nicholson as the introverted
lead, and impressive cinematography by Laszlo Kovacs, The King of
Marvin Gardens had the makings of another Hollywood New Wave hit.
The response, however, was not what stumbling BBS Productions hoped,
as Columbia barely supported the film and 1972 audiences were not
as responsive to Rafelson's second exploration of contemporary alienation.
The King of Marvin Gardens' artful depiction of disillusionment
roots it firmly in the 1970s Hollywood art cinema, and its failure
became one more sign of that cycle's popular limits. |