By Marc S. Sanders
John Schlesinger contributed to the long line of political paranoid thrillers that came out in the 1970s with Marathon Man, with a screenplay by William Goldman based upon his own novel. Most films are not constructed this way any longer. Here is a picture that, albeit may have large plot holes, leaves you curious as to what it all means while you are watching it for the first time. Don’t belabor yourself with watching it again as a way to piece it altogether with logic and sense. You’ll only be keeping yourself up at night.
Marathon Man begins with several different incidents occurring at different parts of globe. A man is tirelessly running through Central Park. In Manhattan, two elderly men get into a heated road rage argument that leaves them dead in a massive explosion. A box of band aids is taken out of a safe deposit box and later smuggled beneath a box of chocolates. In Paris, an explosion occurs after a sharp dressed man gets into a car. A little later, that man is violently attacked in his hotel room, leaving a very bloody mess. A couple is mugged, only the hoodlums are dressed in business suits. Another man is found with his throat slashed in the balcony of an opera house. A white haired man hiding out in South America starts to shave his head. What does it all mean? How are all of these occurrences connected?
As long as vague moments like these don’t carry on too long, I’m likely to be hooked because I consider myself a curious fellow. Thankfully, Goldman’s script pieces the characters together with a few hair raising twists that I didn’t see coming.
Without giving too much away, Dustin Hoffman plays a marathon runner/Columbia University history major with a bleak family background. Beyond his comprehension, he is connected or will find himself connected to each one of these early moments in the film. Once a person very close to him turns up dead in his apartment, the hysteria sets in. Hoffman plays this quite well as he is always trying to catch his breath while soaked in sweat and remaining the lightest of sleepers. Schlesinger creates a terrifying moment with a bathroom door that Hoffman is trying to hide behind. It reminded me of Kubrick’s use of an axe with a bathroom door that would come out four years after this picture, with The Shining.
Laurence Olivier is a mysterious elderly man who has arrived in New York, eventually coming face to face with Hoffman. Thus, leading to one of the most uncomfortable torture scenes in film history. Cancel any upcoming dental appointments that are scheduled soon after watching Marathon Man. You’ll thank me for it.
The set up and players are eventually explained, albeit at breakneck speed when the tension is very high. Put it this way. It’s a challenge to sum up exposition when it’s being dictated in a high-speed car chase. So, on the first viewing, you might miss a few details here and there. Nevertheless, I knew who the good guys were, I knew who the bad guys were and simply hearing the word “Nazi” in any given line of dialogue is enough for me to know how sinister this all is.
I can’t deny the ending feels a little hokey as it takes place in a Central Park reservoir system with platform stairwells and waterfalls all around. Yet the tension remains as a young Dustin Hoffman (a hot commodity of 1970s actors) pairs up with the legendary performer, Laurence Olivier. As I came to understand, Olivier was suffering from a terrible cancer diagnosis while making this picture. Unbelievably, he never shows his illness, as his performance is electric with a well-deserved Oscar nomination. Hoffman was striving for method by exhausting himself personally. I know about the legendary story where Olivier suggested he simply “try acting.” Hoffman later clarified that conversation and explained it had more to do with a personal divorce he was going through and late night drinking at Studio 54. Whatever!!! The ailments these great actors were experiencing at the time lends perfectly to the paranoia.
I try to avoid movie trailers these days. They give away much too much. I had not seen one trailer or commercial for Marathon Man, prior to experiencing it for myself. All I was aware of was the infamous dental torture scene with the famous line “Is it safe?” Out of context, I found it to give me goosebumps. Within the framework of the film, it’s utterly disturbing and it only heightens the suspense that Schlesinger and Goldman were striving for.