Marjorie Morningstar with Gene Kelly: DVD Cover

    Marjorie Morningstar Director: Irving Rapper Cast: Gene Kelly, Natalie Wood, Claire Trevor, Everett Sloane

    DVD - Mono Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 01/05/2002
    • Original Release: 1958
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 13,574

    Viewer Rating: (3 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Soundtrack" See All

     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Full-screen version; Mono audio; Interactive menus; Digitally mastered; Scene access; Information

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    0. Scene Index
    1. Opening Credits [1:29]
    2. Uncle Sampson [3:42]
    3. Marjorie [4:21]
    4. The Proposal [6:50]
    5. Camp Tamarack [5:40]
    6. Marjorie Meets Noel Airman [8:42]
    7. Uncle Sampson's New Job [4:52]
    8. Getting Into Trouble [3:47]
    9. The Waiter Interferes [7:46]
    10. The Inquisition [6:49]
    11. Colored Lanterns [7:58]
    12. Come Back, Uncle Sampson [4:25]
    13. An Old Friend [7:24]
    14. Wally Has a Hit [8:46]
    15. Imogene [6:16]
    16. A Favor [5:10]
    17. Marsha's Maidenly Hysterics [4:57]
    18. Together Again [3:49]
    19. "The Show Won't Fail" [3:56]
    20. Someone to Love [4:51]
    21. End Credits/Marjorie Grows Up [10:42]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Marjorie Morgenstern (Natalie Wood) is an 18-year-old, middle-class, Jewish girl from New York who wants nothing more than to be an actress, despite the hopes and wishes of her parents (Everett Sloane and Claire Trevor) that she graduate from college, marry, and settle down to have a family. At the urging of her more worldly friend Marsha Zelenko (Carolyn Jones), she takes a job at an upstate camp, and, one night when sneaking onto the grounds of a neighboring resort, meets and falls wildly in love with the entertainment director, Noel Airman (Gene Kelly). A Lothario with a gift of song as well as dance, Airman romances Marjorie and tries to teach her something of theater, suggesting that she change her name to Marjorie Morningstar, which she does. He intends to enjoy her company for the summer, until her aging uncle Samson (Ed Wynn), who is also working at the resort, tells him of the family's concerns for the girl. Noel and Marjorie end up linked romantically, despite their best efforts to stay away from each other. Marjorie gives up a potential romance with a slightly older, successful doctor (Martin Balsam) and resists the honest entreaties of Airman's assistant, Wally Wronken (Martin Milner), and tries to get Airman to straighten up and fly right; she can't get her own acting career off the ground, but she owns Airman's heart. Instead of biding his time at writing a musical that he's been working at for four years, and spending his summers working in the Catskills, Noel tries to work in the advertising world -- he also finds himself just as troubled by the stable family life and religious life that Marjorie comes from as he is attracted to her personally. He is also bitterly disturbed by the fact that his one-time assistant Wally Wronken is now a successful Broadway playwright, the darling of critics and audiences, with backers eager to sign checks to produce his work. Unable to pursue a life in business, or remain faithful to Marjorie, he reaches a crisis point from which only she can rescue him -- together they try to build a life and he tries to finish his long-gestating masterpiece, which proves a disaster when it gets to Broadway. Noel abandons Marjorie, and when she goes to find him, Wally warns her off, explaining that Noel has to return to a place where he can feel successful, like the Catskills resort where they met, where he can be the big fish in the tiny pond. Her marriage over and her girlish ideals behind her, she sees Noel back in his element, wowing young acting students with his skills, and finally turns to the one man who has loved her for precisely who she is all along, Wally. Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

    story line is datedby senecaKD

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    September 27, 2009: I LOVED this book as a teen-ager but somehow never saw the movie adaptation until recently. I knew it would be dated and probably not stand up over time. I was right but I did enjoy it anyway. It brought me back to a time when I was more impressionable and idealistic, a time when, like Marjorie, I had youthful and fanciful ideas about life and romance. It's good to reminisce.

    Not Quite the Book--But Memorable Nonethelessby DeanieLoomis

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    February 16, 2009: Marjorie Morningstar" (1958) is an adaptation of the Herman Wouk novel of the same name. I first saw the film on TV when I was an impressionable adolescent and loved it. Later, I read the novel, and having seen the film again as an adult, I've had to readjust my estimation a bit. While it's a creditable transfer of novel to screen--at least by the standards of the 1950s--it has some flaws that are somewhat glaring. The first is the depiction of New York upper-middle-class Jewish culture that veers from being spot-on to wildly overwrought. Then there is Ed Wynn's portrayal of Uncle Samson, especially during a segment in which he performs some cornball vaudeville-type routine at a Catskills resort. He's supposedly the hit of the evening's entertainment, but the bit is painfully unfunny and a temporary drag on the emotional and dramatic tensions central to the film: the relationship between the nice middle-class young woman seeking artistic fulfillment and romance, Marjorie (Natalie Wood), and the older, worldly but emotionally caddish Noel Airman (Gene Kelly). Wood is touching and luminous, but Kelly is beyond superb. One can understand his character's angst even as he is breaking Marjorie's heart--and his own. Based on Kelly's performance here, I can only guess how spectacular he must have been playing the title role in the original 1941 Broadway production of Rodgers and Hart's "Pal Joey.


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