Marathon Man Movie Review
Marathon Man Review
"Marathon Man" Overview

Rating: R
1976
Cast and Crew
Director : John SchlesingerProducer : Sidney Beckerman,Robert Evans
Screenwiter : William Goldman
Starring : Dustin Hoffman,Laurence Olivier,Roy Scheider,William Devane,Marthe Keller,Fritz Weaver
"Is it safe?"
Brrrr... those words still chill me.
Marathon Man (tagline: "A thriller") stands in the odd position of being one of
Dustin Hoffman's finest performances while also being one of writer William
Goldman's (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid) most inscrutable tales. I've
seen the film (newly released on DVD) a half-dozen times and with each viewing
I find myself, at some point, scratching my head.
Adapted from Goldman's own novel, the complicated tale focuses on a grad
student nicknamed Babe (Hoffman), who becomes wrapped up in a mystery, quite
against his wildest expectations. As things play out, we discover that Babe's
brother Doc (Roy Scheider, Jaws) is a covert operative in "The Division," a
CIA-like black ops group that plays on both sides of the Iron Curtain. (This
is 1976, after all.)
But Doc is killed, and after crawling back up to Babe's New York apartment,
ostensibly to tell him some great secret about The Division, he dies without a
word. But when the cops clear out, Babe is kidnapped and ends up being
tortured by a mysterious German named Szell (Laurence Olivier, in an excellent
against-type role) -- a former dentist who also happened to ply his trade at
Auschwitz, so you can imagine what Babe is in store for. Szell constantly asks
"Is it safe?" but of couirse Babe has no idea what he means.
What turns out is that Szell has secreted away all the diamonds he stole from
the Jews during WWII in a U.S. safe deposit box, and he wants to know if it's
safe to finally make a withdrawal and sell them.
Well, that's it in a nutshell. Like I say, Marathon Man is an extremely
cryptic film, and that's putting it kindly. It's not David Lynch cryptic, but
director John Schlesinger has never done anything this enigmatic before or
since.
What's more is that Goldman's backstory for Babe is kept largely intact -- his
father committed suicide when he became a suspect during the McCarthy
investigations. He's a compulsive runner (which gets him out of a few jams)...
a characteristic so important it lends the film its title.
So what of Marathon Man, the movie? As a Cold War spy thriller, it's one of
the best you'll find from the 1970s. Hoffman and Olivier, when together,
perform two of cinema's most memorable sequences -- including the finale when
Babe finally gets to turn the tables. Schlesinger does fairly good work with
Goldman's puzzler, though the film could have benefited from rewrites and
tighter editing. Ultimately, though, one of the most memorable parts of the
film is its music, creepy piano/synth stuff that sounds just a tad out of
tune. It grates perfectly on the nerves... just like a dentist's drill.
Marathon Man's DVD includes two documentaries (one shot then, one shot now),
the trailer, and footage shot during rehearsals.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





