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Martha Marcy May Marlene

Martha Marcy May Marlene

Oct 28, 2011
none
Drama | Thriller
USA | English | Color | 02:00

Haunted by painful memories and increasing paranoia, a damaged woman struggles to re-assimilate with her family after fleeing an abusive cult.
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This graceful portrait of a young woman trying to extricate herself from a cult has the flavor of an early Terrence Malick film like Days of Heaven.

Programmer's Note

Rarely do American independent films carry themselves with as much grace as Martha Marcy May Marlene. Writer/director Sean Durkin’s film, about a young woman’s recovery from time spent in a sexual-religious cult (the subject of many an exploitation flick), is all the more special for resisting the demands of convention and genre. Durkin isn’t especially interested in the lurid details, but rather the psychological motivations for her involvement with this substitute family. His attention to specific gestures and instances of vulnerability are impressive; even the inevitable moments of horror are handled with subtlety. Given Durkin’s complex psychological relationship with his characters, as well as the film’s focus on landscape as metaphor, one can’t help but be reminded of early Terrence Malick.

Martha Marcy May Marlene begins with a young woman (Elizabeth Olsen), known by all four of these names at different stages of the film, struggling to escape from cult life and readjust to normality in the lakeside cottage of her self-involved sister (Sarah Paulson). Vaguely chronological flashbacks to her time in the cult punctuate her incomplete and disturbed recovery. Scenes from Martha’s recent past have a luminous quality that suggests happy memories, but life in the cult is anything but easy: hard labour in the fields, forced sex with the cult leader and a gnawing need to belong compound her confusion. When her surrogate family is forced to engage in criminal activity, she begins to prepare herself for a break, but the cult just won’t vanish from her life.

A special actress is needed to reflect Martha’s tides of conflicting emotion. Olsen, in her auspicious debut, is all that and more, while John Hawkes gives an award-calibre turn as Patrick, the charismatic cult leader. Another notable performance comes from Brady Corbet as Watts, the young man who recruits Martha and becomes her erstwhile companion. Corbet was one of the exceptional young actors in Gregg Araki’s Mysterious Skin, and his evocation of lost innocence in Martha Marcy May Marlene seems to build upon that prescient film.
Noah Cowan

Director's Bio Sean Durkin attended the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. He has directed the short films Doris (06) and Mary Last Seen (10). Martha Marcy May Marlene (11) is his first feature.


Edition details

Nr Discs 1
Layers Single side, Single layer