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Marilyn Monroe And The Making Of "The Misfits" - Documentary 

Marilyn Monroe The Ultimate Collection
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Documentary with rare footage of Marilyn Monroe on the set of "The Misfits" 1960. Marilyn's last completed movie released in 1961. For More Marilyn videos / sgtg77 and / marilynmonroesite

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23 фев 2016

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Комментарии : 533   
@TraceFaceIt
@TraceFaceIt 4 года назад
I think she played herself in this movie. Especially her speech at the end to the men. She was yelling at all the bullshit she was subject to. That is why this movie resonates so well with everyone. We saw the real Marilyn who felt the way she did with this character in real life.
@cattan4696
@cattan4696 3 года назад
You're spot on, Miller wrote it for her and based her character largely on her
@angelabolton4478
@angelabolton4478 2 месяца назад
She was fucking brilliant in this film. Most especially the long-shot of her screaming her words.
@AlexandraRieloff
@AlexandraRieloff 4 года назад
I could not disagree more with the group who say "It did not work as a movie' .. It's a masterpiece, and they are the most dispensable of the entire group.
@tweedy151
@tweedy151 3 года назад
'it didn't really work as a movie' ... hello? It's one of the best films you'll ever see. Maybe it took 50 years to reveal it's brilliance, I don't know. Wonderful, wonderful film.
@rharvey2124
@rharvey2124 2 года назад
You got that right!!!!!!!
@michaelp.9921
@michaelp.9921 2 года назад
@tweedy151: Yes, I agree with you. To me, the group at the end of the documentary may be referring to the reaction of the general public to this film at the time it premiered; they didn't know how to interpret this downbeat, antihero story. It made audiences feel uncomfortable and unfulfilled. They were expecting a more traditional, unambiguous movie from these established actors? (And, also to these "critics" in the documentary I say, why would "The Misfits" have to be any particular "actor's movie"? That thinking is a bit old-fashioned and very limited; this film was breaking new ground in depicting truth and complexity.) (Yes, this group of "critics" at the end seemed to have missed the point; maybe speculating about the initial poor box office returns....?) It remains an extremely poignant, classic movie, of course.....
@rharvey2124
@rharvey2124 2 года назад
@@michaelp.9921 Bet if Miller had run this as a Broadway play first, then the marketing of it as a film later and the public reaction would have been entirely different. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, The Long Hot Summer, Sweet Bird of Youth, Baby Doll and some other serious, odd, and quirky Broadway plays made into films at that same time did well I believe.
@michaelp.9921
@michaelp.9921 2 года назад
@@rharvey2124 : 🙂 Yes, I just thought also, what did audiences expect from the writer of "Death of a Salesman" from 12 years earlier? I suppose they expected that Hollywood would find a way to sweeten the tone of this one, especially the ending......sorta like Disney (and others) are doing today..... 🤨
@waelwael1912
@waelwael1912 2 года назад
And Milton's wife described it as #### film and Marilyn character was so naive 😑😑😑 (it's one of her best performances)
@JohnnyPunish
@JohnnyPunish 3 года назад
To me, Marilyn Monroe is an example of TOUGH STRENGTH; a triumph over poverty, foster homes, orphanages, abuse, and dysfunction. She made it against the odds. I admire her! I would have loved to share tea time with her and just say THANK YOU!
@iconslegends5230
@iconslegends5230 4 года назад
Magnetic Marilyn Monroe... For me, she remains the most attractive woman in the world still today
@Chasstful
@Chasstful 4 года назад
Marilyn Monroe was a beauty like no other.
@duantorruellas716
@duantorruellas716 4 года назад
You can say that again .
@m.e.d.7997
@m.e.d.7997 5 лет назад
Marilyn was so beautiful in The Misfits.
@incog99skd11
@incog99skd11 4 года назад
The film is now a classic. Between Huston's shots of mustangs and Miller's angst in the characters, it epitomizes what we were losing in the early 1960's . That sense of loyalty and ability to keep a promise. I am certain that this film will become even more important as time moves on.
@blueskygal255
@blueskygal255 2 года назад
I think the guy at the end said it best .. Audience had expectations of this being a typical "star vehicle" ... also the self twist of the times where feelings, in general, were not acknowledged. This film broke new ground.
@angelaattenbon4788
@angelaattenbon4788 2 года назад
Today it would be called an independent film. Marilyn wanted to be in the kind of character driven projects that have become the standard of the only American films of today worth watching. She was ahead of her time. But she was trapped not only by Hollywood trivialising her due to her extraordinary beauty but by her own demons. I find her life story so sad.
@patriciacolombini6567
@patriciacolombini6567 2 года назад
So true
@jackgalmitz
@jackgalmitz 3 года назад
The best movie she ever made. The best movie all the actors ever made. A most memorable work of art.
@rharvey2124
@rharvey2124 2 года назад
Agreed. MM wanted drama and she got a great drama written for her by her Pulitzer winning husband. Yet Miller's inclusion of some humor kept it human and from being completely boring. It was the yang needed for the movie's ying.
@MichaelJirochVisualArtist
@MichaelJirochVisualArtist 5 лет назад
The movie has always made me feel sad. That is the power of good art. But what ever the movie made me feel, this documentary sent me into a deep melancholy. Everything about the story behind the story is overwhelmingly depressing.
@postersandstuff770
@postersandstuff770 5 лет назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-cmsXARhtfQY.html My fav MM movie :)
@SassyMa_
@SassyMa_ 5 лет назад
You really feel that way about this movie ? Thank you for sharing that with us, the way you articulated how you felt really impresses me. Can't wait to watch, I can't believe I missed this one, thought I've seen them all...lol! #YourAwesome
@michaelp.9921
@michaelp.9921 2 года назад
@Michael Jiroch: Yes, you are right; I agree. But the documentary still offered a little insight, and that is good.
@gwynshelmerdine8921
@gwynshelmerdine8921 2 года назад
Me too! Have been sad forever since Marilyn, am 55yrs old fell in love with her at 9yrs old still feel the same as I did then what is that about!? She's in my thoughts daily I go to sleep thinking about her Divorce the shock of Gable her own health getting ready for bday song(Kennedy) the feelings she must of felt how Beautiful she looked the lonelyness she must of been going thru Everything! Am always sad. There will never be anyone like her ever on this planet again. Have got to go now coz am doing my own head in. Love Forever Norma Jean AKA Maz Monro. 💋.Xxx ❣️💞💓💗💖❤️💕💟💔💘💯💥🔥✨💐🌹🥀🌷🌺🌸🏵️🌻🌼☀️🐎🐂🐃🐄🐑🐏🐈🐕🐩🐁🐀🐆🐖🐎🐘🦏🐣🐤🐥🐠🐓🐧🦆🦃🦚🦢🦋🐞🐛🐾🐾🦉🦅🐦🦐🐠🦐🦀🦀🐙🐙🍓🍒🍒🍉🍑🍊🍑🍄🍏🍈🍍Peas n carrots. Xxx
@siobhandubois1124
@siobhandubois1124 2 года назад
@@gwynshelmerdine8921 golly, this is the most emojis that I have ever SEEN!💋
@jackriggs1805
@jackriggs1805 7 лет назад
Remember watching this movie at the original release. In my 70"s now and have the tape and only watch it at times when I need encouragement and company of like people. If she only knew how much she meant to much of us....or should I say some of us. I love you Marilyn.
@debbyvanzanen6705
@debbyvanzanen6705 5 лет назад
I agree, Jack. I feel the same way about her. I also felt that this film was so ahead of its time, in so many ways, & it was misunderstood and not given the great revues it so rightly deserved. It was the first ENVIRONMENTAL movie, the first to say, through Roselyn, that we need the horses, the eagles, the rabbits, each other. Some critic could have pointed this out, but it was very early for the coming environmental movement. Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring" had just started to make waves, and people seemed puzzled about its "meaning". It really predicted the coming 60's consciousness, but it's all there in Miller's brilliantly prophetic script. A valentine for all of us, not just Marilyn. What puzzled me was that Marilyn didn't seem to relate to what he wrote when I thought he had captured her sensitivity to the injustices of life , & her quest to save all living things she could, ever since she was a child. She deserved an Oscar nomination, but was denied again because of her insistence that she wanted her scenes to be true to the spirit of the material, and to the spirit inside her. A brilliant actress who had to die to get the acknowledgement they so meanly denied her.
@yvonneshanson1525
@yvonneshanson1525 Год назад
I hope you're well 🙂❤💜
@erlstone
@erlstone 3 года назад
a film that is unique in almost every way, a very rare diamond to come out of Hollywood.. Huston was a true maverick... what a man.
@americanwoman8967
@americanwoman8967 6 лет назад
the fact that so much is written and said about Gable, Clift and Monroe, so many years after they've passed, says volumes about their acting. Lightning in a bottle is a good description of successful film portrayals. Simply one of a kind, unique artists.
@lindacarey4661
@lindacarey4661 6 лет назад
american woman.
@degsbabe
@degsbabe 4 года назад
Yes 'Bottled spider' was and is the best description of Strasberg. Parasitic Shelob .
@lynnhorn4687
@lynnhorn4687 2 года назад
My best friend who passed away this past Christmas Day was an extra in this movie. I keep looking for her.
@monikamylonopoyloy6223
@monikamylonopoyloy6223 4 года назад
I can't stand the disrespect towards Marilyn.
@lynntownsend4457
@lynntownsend4457 2 месяца назад
Directed by her own husband, terrible
@mariamatsumura5934
@mariamatsumura5934 4 года назад
She so beautiful here , Marilyn Monroe
@rimckd825
@rimckd825 4 года назад
And I could never imagine her as some corporate cosmetics spokesperson... that would denigrate her.
@lynnettegyllenblad1700
@lynnettegyllenblad1700 6 лет назад
I think it's hard for people to deal with emotional issues period, whether it's their own or somebody else's. This movie portrays that very well. And of course Marilyn's emotional state was completely misunderstood at the time, and yet, it was her mystique..
@jessewinson742
@jessewinson742 6 лет назад
Didnt work? I loved every second of that movie.... every character/actor was fantastic.
@richardlundberg1296
@richardlundberg1296 3 года назад
Agreed. Me too Loved every second
@wolfdudercp
@wolfdudercp 4 месяца назад
The fact that this movie, stories and actors were broken makes this film genius and precious all these years later. Even the paddle ball scene was sad. You can’t compare this movie to anything else.
@ransomcoates546
@ransomcoates546 5 лет назад
It's true that not so long ago the entertainment industry was full of intelligent and eloquent people. And now...
@pulsarstargrave256
@pulsarstargrave256 6 лет назад
WONDERFUL MOVIE! My favorite movie with Marilyn Monroe because I generally can't stand most of the films she's known for! But this one? MAGNIFICENT! Gable really impressed me with how vulnerable the usual "Manly Man" allowed himself to be depicted! It's just a delightfully, eccentric little movie and one that I love!
@robbyrutz2925
@robbyrutz2925 4 года назад
If you watch carefully, MM says a lot of things in this movie that she had experienced in real life.....
@robbyrutz2925
@robbyrutz2925 4 года назад
@Ed Miller Of course, any smart person would know she is reading from a script by her husband.However, the lines and words mimic her life perfectly. That's my take.
@melisagalvalizi6982
@melisagalvalizi6982 2 года назад
OF COURSE, THAT BASTARD WROTE THE SCREENPLAY AS A"GIFT".
@AshleyS60
@AshleyS60 2 года назад
The thing is because Marilyn Monroe was physically flawless, people expected her to be emotionally and mentally without flaw as well and that simply could not be the case. It's clear that Miller was a condescending, dismissive ass who threw too much emotional turmoil at her and she probably wasn't equipped to deal with it all. Also people forget she suffered multiple miscarriages when all she desperately wanted was a child, I can only imagine how that would have affected her. They all preyed on her sensitivity and insecurities and it's truly truly sad that she was never properly nurtured... Marilyn was too pure, sweet and beautiful for this world and the world was ill equipped to appreciate, love and protect her.
@MsMimilala
@MsMimilala 6 лет назад
All these men who fell in love with her fell in love with the icon MM... then they realise she's Norma Jean with all the insecurities as most women and then some lol... same thing with Bette Davis... she said of husband Gary Merrill... he fell in love with the image of Bette Davis not the person....
@Halo-li8hg
@Halo-li8hg 5 лет назад
Yup
@SassyMa_
@SassyMa_ 5 лет назад
I agree 💯, Except Clark Gable, he loved her very much. They say in on of his bio's that he had empathy for MM, he protected her feelings and had her back when the cast in husband didn't have patience for,...He was in the business so long, he would tell others " that woman in the business had it the worst", bc he wanted to save her, like all the others, he's the only one who never used her. To bad they made the misfits so late there lived, who knows they could have married, and I believe after watching Gable's bio that it's very possible he was the only man that could have saved her, he loved and respected her so much....We can always dream, right. I love MM, so beautiful and kind.
@jessiemotuza3101
@jessiemotuza3101 4 года назад
Well said
@Lilly-fi9jg
@Lilly-fi9jg 4 года назад
She was a very fragile young woman who took up with the most egotistical, self-centered, self-important men...Arthur Miller, Joe DiMaggio, Yves Montand, and the Kennedys. Then there was the elitist gang at The Actors Studio in New York. She couldn't have chosen worse people to make her feel small and inferior.
@Reprodestruxion
@Reprodestruxion 4 года назад
Sassy Ma as Monty despite Liz Taylor and his homosexuality
@christopherarmitage1030
@christopherarmitage1030 2 года назад
Mini masterpiece is a perfect description for this movie. All five principals play their parts masterfully. Marilyn Monroe took her craft more seriously than most people realize.
@gofmjhhytgr2129
@gofmjhhytgr2129 5 лет назад
“Something didn't work about the movie in the end” What total drivel, it's beautiful...
@rimckd825
@rimckd825 4 года назад
Agree - an idiotic comment, heard it and said WTF !!!??? Brain dead I guess....
@marlenemuse7455
@marlenemuse7455 3 года назад
My favorite movie with Marilyn..she was so sad and so sweet.
@mauricioexenberger6225
@mauricioexenberger6225 7 лет назад
The Misfits is a fantastic classic both the history of remaining cowboys of the Old West as the cast, photography and direction. The film failed at the box office in part because it was poorly publicized. If he had competed in Cannes, for example, surely win major awards and status to compete in the world market .
@Raughwe
@Raughwe 7 лет назад
I love Eli Wallach. He was a modest fellow, but a monster actor. I just love him and I miss him.
@idfy2599
@idfy2599 4 года назад
I was born in 1954. I have never seen this film because I heard from critics it was not that good. Of course, being a child when it was released, I wouldn't want to then. Later, as I said, critics were not kind. Now , here it is , 2020 and I am watching these clips. I have got to get my hañds on this. Marilyn is remarkable. Knowing the history of Gable and the others, it is sad to know they pass soon after this is completed.
@rharvey2124
@rharvey2124 2 года назад
Hope you got to see it. It's great. But it's not a fluffy slapstick comedy such as some like it hot.
@AlexandraRieloff
@AlexandraRieloff 7 лет назад
This film is in the archives of film classics at the MOMA; it's piece of art.
@deanrane1961
@deanrane1961 6 лет назад
Just finished watching The Misfits again. This incredible film with the amazing cast, director & everyone involved is a true masterpiece. Thanx for this doc. We're really getting into it .
@geekay1349
@geekay1349 7 лет назад
its a very surreal movie to watch even now. timeless in some way probably because of the cast of characters that have become mythical over time. i like it because of how un-hollywood-like it is. The title is perfect and I think Miller was at his most creative working with Houston
@rogerdodger4598
@rogerdodger4598 7 лет назад
On a different note, this film, not bus stop, is Marilyn's best performance! She became this idealistic, innocent, hurting woman with a big heart. All the actors turn in good performances. Monty Cliff shines. Gable becomes the man he portrays. The cinematography is superb. Watch it for a while with the sound off. The dialogue is so real, and true to life. Miller listened to locals conversing. How much did he receive from that exercise? As the producers said, this film isn't really about anything. There's no story here. Leftists like Miller were taught that a slice of life which puts American culture in a bad light, is all that's required for a successful play. The Misfits really isn't about anything. It has a lot of loneliness, sadness, and uncertainty in it. In any event, at the close of their careers, Gable, Monroe, and Clift showed their superior acting chops!
@max17ren
@max17ren 2 года назад
The scene between Monty and Marilyn where tells her about his childhood is so incredible. He really was a truly gifted actress. It’s sad and maudlin but I LOVE this film.
@ronniebishop2496
@ronniebishop2496 2 года назад
And leftist ideas.
@EM-lz9kg
@EM-lz9kg 2 года назад
Leftist like myself , question life
@aclark903
@aclark903 Год назад
Can you imagine Monroe in The Crucible?
@pophybrid
@pophybrid 10 месяцев назад
This is an interesting quote - Leftists like Miller were taught that a slice of life which puts American culture in a bad light, is all that's required for a successful play. Would you care to elaborate?
@JSB1882
@JSB1882 4 года назад
This is my all time favorite film. It works for me. This was the best writing by Miller and an incredible cast. Hell - the making of the movie could be a movie, but you could never find people like this to play the roles. I've always seen it as a film about the loss of masculinity or the changing times of what it was expected to be a man.
@vuho7832
@vuho7832 4 года назад
Dave La Violette For me, the movie wasn’t that particularly interesting. The making of the movie has always been the fascinating part.
@Missditabomb
@Missditabomb 2 года назад
@Dave La Violette: Actually, near the time of Arthur Miller's death, he had a play opening in Chicago, called, "Finishing The Picture". The play was all about the shooting of "The Misfits"............about Marilyn, about the cast, about all of. Fifty years later the man was still making money off of his ex-wife's corpse.
@AlexandraRieloff
@AlexandraRieloff 3 года назад
I completely disagree, with the general consensus of the team who ways this movie didn't work. The fact, that it wasn't a Marilyn Monroe movie, or a Clack Gable movie, or a Monty Cliff movie, is what makes it a masterpiece. It's a vision of magic, with a team of talent unlike few others, so the opine of the observers, is trunked by the talent of the artists ... they are basically, commentators, obviously, not the creators. Arthur Miller was one of our greatest, writers.
@henrikechers9995
@henrikechers9995 4 года назад
Love this movie, and every actor was great in it
@TrinTeeX
@TrinTeeX 5 лет назад
Nobody is talking about the innocent voiceless horses that were exploited, tortured, and mistreated, all for greed $$ fortune and fame. The scene where Marilyn is calling out the insanity of killing horses, Gable's reaction, and his ability to convince her character that the horses don't matter is the most disturbing thing I have ever seen. This movie is about exploitation of innocent animals that have as much right to be free as any human. Even today we round up any last remaining wild mustangs and sell them at auction to slaughter. The human race are all misfits. We dont belong here.
@cbrown11846
@cbrown11846 4 года назад
You know , the movie is Old, maybe a that time , the animal concert , was a less important than now it is .
@phyllisruthmick5391
@phyllisruthmick5391 4 года назад
Great comment! I couldn't agree more!
@Reprodestruxion
@Reprodestruxion 4 года назад
Well that became poignant
@cbrown11846
@cbrown11846 4 года назад
René Moncayo absolutly, sometimes it’s necessary to show the horror in order to do conscious . It’s the first step
@stagehand9002
@stagehand9002 3 года назад
youre awesome!!!!
@lisblythin7349
@lisblythin7349 2 года назад
Wonderful film. I will never forget the end, Monroe, Gable and the stars above all.
@jessiemotuza3240
@jessiemotuza3240 2 года назад
Most of these men just used & abused Marilyn. I feel such genuine sadness when I think of how lonely she must have felt during these times. How sad to be loved by everyone & yet feel such a deep sense of darkness. I pray she is at peace.
@robindore9582
@robindore9582 2 года назад
Marilyn Monroe the most beautiful woman in Hollywood ❤️ and in the world.
@yaronkl
@yaronkl 2 года назад
All these people were really seizing the opportunity to speak badly of Marilyn every chance they had.
@dextermoore278
@dextermoore278 Год назад
Yes. These people are disgusting saying horrible things about Marilyn. Marilyn was good in this Movie.
@lorianabanana6066
@lorianabanana6066 Год назад
Some people think that in order to build themselves up they have to tear everyone else down. They especially need to tear down anyone who dares to let themselves shine or live outside of the little boxes they want to shove people into.
@user61920
@user61920 8 месяцев назад
Or they just thought she was bad?
@brkitdwn
@brkitdwn 7 лет назад
Great documentary. Love hearing everyone recant their memories, and experiences. Never had an interest in the film, but now I do.
@julieclayton-west624
@julieclayton-west624 2 года назад
What a depressing and soul crushing story. It must’ve been hell to have to work on that script day in and out. God and those poor horses.
@Missditabomb
@Missditabomb 2 года назад
Everything Miller wrote was depressing. Everything.
@waelwael1912
@waelwael1912 2 года назад
@@Missditabomb yeah i hate a death of a salesman, but if u read the misfits script it's amazing and much away better than this film
@Missditabomb
@Missditabomb 2 года назад
@@waelwael1912 Thanks for that suggestion!! I think I will try to get my hands on a copy. Thanks again!
@schwaarnkreddy7805
@schwaarnkreddy7805 Год назад
@@Missditabomb Because..he was presenting or getting at Truths we all avoid thinking about and run away from into escapist fare of palliative falsehoods and romantic untruths! Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, Eugene O Neill, Ibsen, Shakespeare, Marlowe, Bernard Shaw....they all went after disturbing irreconcilable truths.
@dwhitman3092
@dwhitman3092 11 месяцев назад
Beg to differ with the folks that said this film "didn't work". It most certainly did, and will be remembered as a classic throughout film history.
@Myplop
@Myplop 2 года назад
Gable gave great performance in this movie
@algoldstein3461
@algoldstein3461 Год назад
The Misfits is pure genius. But I can see why Marilyn would’ve been upset. It’s got a lot of hidden psychological meanings and hits close to home with her past on so many levels it’s insane. Also hits at American youth and how they idolize movie stars. So the ending with two of the biggest stars following the “star” st night to find there way back home is genius. Marilyn followed gable to be a star. Her asking how to get back and him giving that answer is genius writing. The added dimension how he died in real life soon and her death makes even more of a Hollywood true classic
@bobcuster8930
@bobcuster8930 5 лет назад
If you love the Misfits--be sure and visit Reno, Nevada...Harrah's Casino is still there...as is the Washoe County Courthouse..There is a new Virginia Street bridge today--The bridge where Monro and Ritter discussed tossing Marilyn's ring away was removed in 2016... The intense rodeo scenes were lensed in Dayton, Nevada, off Pike Street..The wild horse scenes were filmed near Gerlach--where the famous Burning Man event is now held...and the Ranch scenes at a ranch located near Pyramid Lake, east of Reno...
@leighwinson9859
@leighwinson9859 4 года назад
Great movie I don't understand how the people that worked on it could sit there and say it didn't work as a movie it was a fantastic movie one of my favorites
@one4allall4one91
@one4allall4one91 4 года назад
26:00 Love this scene. Clark is probably speaking in behalf of millions of men who follow her. Its a special moment in time. Two of the most famous people on earth.
@cheryldimanno1314
@cheryldimanno1314 2 года назад
Marilyn Monroe was one of a kind. She was brilliant in her talent. A real person. So beautiful.
@catalinaschmidt9175
@catalinaschmidt9175 6 лет назад
Thank you , people. The best film forever. The big door to the mistical change for each and everyone.
@teeniebeenie8774
@teeniebeenie8774 6 лет назад
thelma ritter steals every scene love her!
@MTknitter22
@MTknitter22 6 лет назад
teenie beenie Yes VERY UNDERRATED ACTRESS
@maureenmcdonough7018
@maureenmcdonough7018 4 года назад
Thelma Ritter Was simply the best, I’ve never seen a movie with her in it that I didn’t like.
@warmflash
@warmflash 4 года назад
teenie beenie | Ritter was a genius
@zigulimiguli
@zigulimiguli 6 лет назад
such a great movie....
@douglastreem7104
@douglastreem7104 4 года назад
That was great. Thank you for the posting. The film itself archives awesome depth.
@TheListOf
@TheListOf 2 года назад
Masterpiece.
@bumblebee9337
@bumblebee9337 5 лет назад
Men who can't love will suck the life out of you.
@irishcountrygirl78
@irishcountrygirl78 4 года назад
She went for ugly or narcissistic or old or all three type of men. She never thought she worth more than that.
@O_Towne_Bear
@O_Towne_Bear 4 года назад
Women who can't love as well.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 4 года назад
-Tracey - no that’s not it at all. She was looking for an older man and someone influential like a father figure. She even called Arthur Miller and Joe DiMaggio “Daddy”...You might not find them attractive but she did.
@chrisjeffries2322
@chrisjeffries2322 2 года назад
Thank you for the documentary up load, I have the DVD.
@richardknapp8322
@richardknapp8322 6 лет назад
ALSO, THIS MOVIE WAS SADLY THE LAST MOVIE FOR MANY OF ITS STARS.
@saintcruzin
@saintcruzin 7 лет назад
This is my favorite Marilyn movie ever. Outstanding acting and story but most disagree...Xlint film...
@Be12397
@Be12397 4 года назад
I don’t want to hear a word about Marilyn from that Inge Morath. She had her eyes on Marilyn’s husband the whole movie and she got him in the end. It’s disrespectful to even have her in this, but obviously it’s a piece celebrating Arthur Miller.
@richardknapp8322
@richardknapp8322 6 лет назад
It seems she was more of a trophy or icon than an actual love interest for him. He seems like somewhat a cold sob.
@akrenwinkle
@akrenwinkle 4 года назад
If you believe the as-told-to book by Marilyn's personal maid, he was the ultimate stuck-up a-hole who wouldn't give Marilyn the time of day, even had a separate bedroom.
@cathlynpollom2545
@cathlynpollom2545 3 года назад
I agree. I’ve always been of the same opinion of him myself. I never liked him. I think of him as a wrong choice for her. He was simply incapable of giving her what she needed. She had something inside her that the right man could have made all the difference.
@porflepopnecker4376
@porflepopnecker4376 2 года назад
I totally disagree. I think they were both to blame for their relationship not working. I mean she was having an affair, for Pete's sake.
@angelaattenbon4788
@angelaattenbon4788 2 года назад
@@porflepopnecker4376 She never recovered from finding out that he was disappointed with her intelligence. He wrote about it in his journal. So she turned to Yves Montand probably in part for revenge and in part for consolation.
@MrsMildredPierce
@MrsMildredPierce 2 года назад
@@angelaattenbon4788 He didn't mentioned her intelligence, he mentioned the trouble she caused on the set. Also, Yves Montand was married.
@venusmoon9515
@venusmoon9515 8 лет назад
Awesome Documentary! !
@nakedworldentertainment9645
@nakedworldentertainment9645 3 года назад
LOVE TO MARILYN MONROE.
@chuckciao1
@chuckciao1 5 лет назад
The best analysis of a movie I’ve ever seen!
@Jacks_here
@Jacks_here 5 лет назад
This is such a odd film to pin point what is really going on. Arthur Miller wrote this as a ‘valentine’ for Marilyn. Roslyn was Marilyn. I have no idea how Marilyn must have felt to ‘diss’ herself in the scene with her photographs. It all seem such a mindfuck but in the end the result was amazing; Clift being Clift, Clark being Clark and Marilyn being Marilyn and of course Huston being Huston. How funny.
@grai
@grai 4 года назад
I thought that watching the scene in the bar with the bat and ball and the TACKY close-up of Monore's arse going back and forth It's disturbingly sexist and disrespectful and yet Miller stood there while she allowed herself to be filmed getting humiliated *by what he had written* it ends with some random drunk roughly grabbing Monroe and spanking her arse several times really hard while everyone laughs some Valentine
@piachristoffersen3740
@piachristoffersen3740 2 года назад
@@grai I agree, Marilyn hated the part... He could have presented her like a goddess, but he chose that... He was the downfall of Marilyn.
@johnhummer265
@johnhummer265 2 года назад
"They" the production team n Arthur Miller, the writer, say "It didn't work" from THEIR perspective...,...but the audience luved it......and that's what counts.....n even now, 60 yrs. later it's considered a 'Gem' .........time is usually the determining factor for most things.
@yelloworangered
@yelloworangered 6 лет назад
And the insecurity of a beauty is one thousand times compounded when a woman becomes an aging beauty.
@stevereed8786
@stevereed8786 7 лет назад
Don't over think this, she was no dummy, this was a great movie because of her. Huston saw it, genuine and beauty came together here and that's rare. It's good to she her genius in the madness.
@Reprodestruxion
@Reprodestruxion 7 лет назад
Steve Reed montgomery clift Fell in love with her and complimented her, that would be enough Praise for anyone else
@MTknitter22
@MTknitter22 6 лет назад
Steve Reed - but without Gable too it would have been nothing
@laurenlenzini914
@laurenlenzini914 4 года назад
The movie is actually very good . I hate how a beloved actress is put down time and time again not able to defend herself
@mariaevans7811
@mariaevans7811 3 года назад
Well said!!!!! 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗
@carinafernandes1234
@carinafernandes1234 3 года назад
Exactly!
@melisagalvalizi6982
@melisagalvalizi6982 2 года назад
This documentary should be called EXCUSING ARTHUR MILLER.
@paulaguenon1660
@paulaguenon1660 4 года назад
I always liked the film. I thought Cable showed his talent.
@traceydomalik7810
@traceydomalik7810 3 года назад
If this is how they talk about Marilyn decades after her death, I don't want to know how vicious they were when she was alive. With friends like these, who needs enemies?
@darrenlloyd4835
@darrenlloyd4835 3 года назад
Exactly they blamed her for the tention and the movie having to closed down for some time The real reason was that john Houston was gambling all the money away. Its disgusting how shd was scapegoated
@melisagalvalizi6982
@melisagalvalizi6982 2 года назад
@@darrenlloyd4835 exactly
@CharlizeQuin
@CharlizeQuin Год назад
None of these people were Marilyn’s friends. The tension on the set is well documented, and crew members split into teams, Miller vs Monroe. Everyone in this documentary were on team Miller lol.
@Chasstful
@Chasstful 4 года назад
Nobody played a heal like Eli Wallach
@MrWadsox
@MrWadsox 4 года назад
He was especially good in the spaghetti westerns of the 60s.
@flashtheoriginal
@flashtheoriginal 2 месяца назад
It is a magnificent movie. I dont think the wider public identify the quality of acting, storyline and direction here because it is easy to badge the lead roles as more sensational than the movie itself. Clark Gable is superb here, Montgomery Clift had never been better and, in my view, this is Marylin Monroe's best performance, eclipsing her otherwise finest hour in Bus Stop
@alivialevnjak5887
@alivialevnjak5887 8 лет назад
Thank you for uploading, I enjoyed it!
@katesun2957
@katesun2957 3 года назад
You look like MM, or is that a pic of her?
@chrisjeffries2322
@chrisjeffries2322 2 года назад
@@katesun2957 It is Marilyn.
@tomsragner3421
@tomsragner3421 Год назад
The movie and this documentary were great. Nicely done.
@jenniferjensen9434
@jenniferjensen9434 2 года назад
I always felt bad that Marilyn didn't understand that what Miller wrote for her was a total understanding of who she really was. Maybe she did, maybe that's why she hated the script, and resented him for writing it for her. Putting a mirror up to a persons eyes isn't always going to get you appreciation. Poor girl, you can see what a tortured woman she really was.
@tonigillette9217
@tonigillette9217 2 года назад
Sure. The first modern female cinema actor was a romantic prop for aging men with no prospects in real life. Miller worked for the FBI and the studio and neither gave a sh*t about who the artist was, only about her box office draw for people with no taste and about her political activities.
@O_Towne_Bear
@O_Towne_Bear 4 года назад
Eli seems to be the only one that has anything nice to say about her.
@Galvestonmermaid
@Galvestonmermaid 5 лет назад
Can't stand Arthur Miller. He did nothing but make her feel even more inadequate and worse about herself. He used her.
@freespiritxoxo7343
@freespiritxoxo7343 4 года назад
Oh please. Their history goes back to way before he had to testify in front of Congress. He met her through Elia Kazan (who she was sleeping with at the time) and they began to keep in touch through letters. They had a long time affair while Arthur was married. The way you get them is the way you lose them. And she cheated before he did.
@andywerner838
@andywerner838 4 года назад
I agree .as far as I know he never explained what he meant about the book or such to her maybe if he did oh I don't know. So sad
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 4 года назад
That is such bullshit!!! Did you not watch this?! SHE was abusive to HIM! He wrote this movie for her and how does she repay him? She cheats on him with Yves Montand.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 4 года назад
FreeSpirit xoxo amen!
@katgirlblue
@katgirlblue 4 года назад
I never liked him. He comes across as so pompous and arrogant. Whether he actually was or not, I don't know, but that's how he seems. It certainly was not a match made in heaven. In the end, every man used Marilyn for one reason or another, except her first husband James Dougherty, who married her when she was only 16 so she wouldn't have to go to another foster home.
@spockboy
@spockboy 4 года назад
The Misfits is a strange film. It totally feels like a B movie, and yet it was made by MANY extremely talented people.
@renatamarki2435
@renatamarki2435 4 года назад
My guess because of the material (so progressive, just thinking about Marilyn role regarding the Mustangs how pre-animal-right-activist was she, time when Coloured people still had not got justice) as in and out was such a uniqe, rare and untouchable.
@user61920
@user61920 8 месяцев назад
I agree with you very much man. Definitely felt like a B movie, honestly I was not impressed by it. It was definitely a mess in my eyes, like Miller says. But, to me Marilyn was the best performance in the film lol, she struck me as very natural. Whereas her costars felt like old school theatre actors (and they were irl, so it would check out). Did you like it?
@TheTibmeister
@TheTibmeister 4 года назад
The fact that all three of the main characters were dead within a relatively short time after the film was made is a bit of a downer for any film
@davidwise3426
@davidwise3426 7 лет назад
Very interesting documentary.
@francescahamilton6856
@francescahamilton6856 10 месяцев назад
What are they talking about? The Mifits is one of the best movies ever made? They also cut the best moment in the phonebox scene. The Misfits is a classic. Montgomery Cliff, ahhhhh.....Thanku every1 involved.
@TheJoan48
@TheJoan48 Год назад
Imagine the challenge before Marilyn. Her own life was so far from what she wanted. She just had a miscarriage a short time before this movie started. She had to personify womanhood with three men who all laid themselves at her feet. Imagine the challenge of being wanted by everyone but at the same time, feeling empty because it was so overwhelming to be their fantasy of a perfect woman. She stood up to the plate and hit home run after home run. It emptied her though. Such a shame she didn't continue life in real life with Clark Gable as they drove off towards home together. Well, actually, they did end up home together soon enough if we consider that heaven.
@TheVerbalVolley
@TheVerbalVolley 7 лет назад
What a prick Arthur is. Even when just talking about her in general, he always has to add asides that denigrate her. He should, instead, have gotten down on his knees and thanked her (and God) for supporting him during their marriage. He was broke during that time, and MM worked to support him. She never had a harsh word to say about him or any of her other husbands. She was true class in that respect. We should thank Miller for convincing her to star in "Some Like it Hot". He needed the $, but she did not want to do the film. She was tired of being the sex symbol in a film, and longed for serious, meaty dramatic roles. Arthur convinced her to do it, and it was one of her most successful movies. It was done for all of the wrong reasons, yet the result was positive. MM was not an alcoholic. In fact she was one of those people who reacted badly to alcohol, so she could only sip champagne. She never took "uppers", but had an addiction to sleeping pills, which created a quandary. She would take her sleeping pills, and not be able to fall asleep until 5am or 6am. She was supposed to arrive on the set for filming at 7am or 8am, which meant that she had only had about one or two hours sleep or less (if she fell asleep at all). This explained why she was late to the set. She was totally depleted. She had only just fallen asleep and was exhausted when they tried to rouse her. By refusing to take uppers, she was basically a zombie in the mornings of the filming of the movie, ad could not show up until the effects of the sleeping pills wore off, which was usually the afternoon.
@Reprodestruxion
@Reprodestruxion 7 лет назад
Verbal Volley plus her bravery during the McCarthy Cohn hearings
@TheVerbalVolley
@TheVerbalVolley 7 лет назад
Absolutely. She actually put her career in danger by backing Arthur Miller during the communist investigations. She wanted so desperately for the marriage to work, but after Arthur deliberately left his diary open to a page where he vilified her, she was devastated and fell in to a deep depression. Arthur was a real prick. especially since she was supporting him during their marriage, because he supposedly had "writers block", and couldn't put a single word to paper. MM was very generous with those she loved.
@michael69040
@michael69040 7 лет назад
I think Miller understood males in their attempts at self realization but he was clueless about the female psyche. It was a major failure he perhaps was reluctant to admit.
@ellemathews9840
@ellemathews9840 3 года назад
Arthur miller was the biggest downfall of Marilyn's life. If she never met or married him I believe her life would have turned out very differently.
@dextermoore278
@dextermoore278 Год назад
NOT TRUE, MM WAS ON UPPERS AND DOWNERS EVER DAY.
@julianbonser
@julianbonser 5 месяцев назад
I've made several attempts to watch The Misfits over time, but couldn't get into it and aborted on each occasion - I was a teen when it premiered. But having seen this fascinating documentary I watched the movie through fresh eyes and relished every frame - a cinematic treasure. The reason - the documentary illustrates in detail the back story to the film's making and highlights the parallels linking the screen characters with the real lives of the actors - which in hindsight adds a deep poignancy to the movie. Plus the documentary draws attention to the subtleties of the dialogue, which went flying over my head on the occasions I tried watching the movie prior. This time round I was fully immersed in the film and understood the emotions, the pathos, the anger and the disappointment and desperation of the characters and the underlying aimlessness of their existences. It often takes time for a film to mature and finally surface as a highly regarded piece of cinema. Like so many situations in life, we need the passing of time in order look back and see things through more thoughtful eyes. Thanks for uploading this documentary. I'll be watching the movie again when my recent viewing has settled down in my head and I'm ready to look further beneath the surface.
@teribradshaw-milling3164
@teribradshaw-milling3164 Месяц назад
I think this movie - being Gable's last - was a fitting exit, and testament to him, his love of the craft and perfect ending for the golden age of movie making into the new.
@SeaTravelr123
@SeaTravelr123 4 месяца назад
Im already looking forward to this Documentary.. I met Eli Wallach and his wife Ann Jackson several times. He was not only a wonderful and talented actor, he was a true Mensch..
@gregrak9389
@gregrak9389 7 лет назад
yet another documentary where people seem intent on doing a "hatchet job" on Marilyn Monroe, the constant, never ending quips about her always being late on the set, her dependence on Paula Strasberg, blah blah blah, enough already, and the "icing on the cake" the ultimate insult, having to listen to the "next Mrs Arthur Miller" passing judgment.
@averyflores3669
@averyflores3669 7 лет назад
Greg Rak yes, everyone goes on and on about her but what about Miller and the other men on set spending lots of money gambling. They need to back off of her already.
@gregrak9389
@gregrak9389 7 лет назад
agreed.
@d.hanafin5204
@d.hanafin5204 7 лет назад
I completely agree.
@mamatibborscassady9388
@mamatibborscassady9388 7 лет назад
She was a horrid actress..........but I give it a thumbs up, her part written for her by her husband, who knew her limitations,and got a good performance out of her.
@gregrak9389
@gregrak9389 7 лет назад
you are entitled to your views, calling her a "horrid" actress is a little over the top though.
@shannoncoon4019
@shannoncoon4019 3 года назад
Thanks so much 🙏 💓 ☺ lots of 💘!!! 😘 LUV mm
@christianbasehart4767
@christianbasehart4767 5 лет назад
I'd have liked to have seen her real life friendship with Clift flourish. But there was no time.
@SandrinesVoxServices
@SandrinesVoxServices 2 года назад
41:17 Pure envy, jealousy. Of course it must be very hard and frustrating to deal with an actor who makes it hard on the set but this woman is vile talking about someone who outshined everybody else. She can spew those words all she wants, MM was a diamond, which is born out of hard rock and difficult terrain.
@sarahholland2600
@sarahholland2600 2 года назад
Well said. There's plenty of stuff been written about Miller's poor behaviour in the marriage. Leaving his diary out for her to find, with disparaging , demeaning comments about her etc.
@aimees.7332
@aimees.7332 8 лет назад
MILLER treated MM awfully,not the other way around!! READ,READ,READ some bloody books peeps,to know what REALLY happened!!!!
@chunder27
@chunder27 8 лет назад
Books are not the answer facts are. She had an affair with Yves before this after reading notes from Miller in a diary that upset her, so her trust in him was gone. Arthur adored her, they adored each other, but the relationship and pressure of working together pushed it to breaking point in this movie. That's all. She was ill here, had another troubled miscarriage, was very influenced by Strasberg and the drugs. he was meddling with the script until the early hours not exactly helping MM's already perilous stage anxiety, so it was always likely to be hard work.
@robertzee4799
@robertzee4799 8 лет назад
Wow, interesting. You sound as if you know the real scoop. She had the affair with Y. M. after reading notes in a diary? Can you please explain this? This is important issue. I agree: working together is very tough, especially on something as complicated and exacting as a serious movie. Did Miller blame her for the miscarriage, as some documentaries would have us believe? It sounds like Miller, Taylor, and Houston had very high hopes for this film. It is a great epic to me. Considering her issues, M. M. is excellent and looks wonderful! It seems her issues, though, hurt the making of the film. It seem as if M. M. is really paddling that ball!?
@ironduke2000
@ironduke2000 7 лет назад
She read the diary entry very early into the marriage, while she was making The Prince and the Showgirl. Apparently Miller was appalled by her behavior on the set and he compared her in the diary to his first wife, the one he had divorced for MM. The affair with Montand didn't occur until a few years later. She felt that Miller was shutting her out, and the affair was, at least partly, an attempt at getting his attention. I've never seen or read anything to the effect that Miller blamed MM for her miscarriages. I'm not saying he didn't; I'm just saying I've never heard that. MM had settled on Miller as the perfect man for her, after they met on the set of As Young As You Feel in 1950. Weirdly, she met Elia Kazan, Miller's friend and collaborator, on the same day and began an affair with him. She was impressed that Miller took her seriously and didn't make a move on her, and they each carried a torch until they met again in 1954, after she moved to New York, but the marriage inevitably fell short of the high expectations -- a common enough story.
@robertzee4799
@robertzee4799 7 лет назад
Thanks for your perceptions. I loved the Misfits. A lot of meaning. But, I believe, she was disappointed that her role still had her earlier image in it, I guess. She, and the other actors, were excellent.
@robertzee4799
@robertzee4799 7 лет назад
Please tell us what really happened. I feel that one of the problems is that Miller is a playwright, not a moviewright, with all the due respect that he deserves.
@christinahall2587
@christinahall2587 4 года назад
Poor people. It’s like the song says, “ On broken wings my heart has taken flight “. 💧
@cpkarkow663
@cpkarkow663 3 года назад
at 33:18, you'll notice the dealer at the left - this was the mother of Donny Schwartz - owner of Abby's Hwy 40 here in Reno. He has this picture above the bar
@schwaarnkreddy7805
@schwaarnkreddy7805 Год назад
It's a curse to be born intelligent, with different sensibilities and sensitivities, and creative( none of these in the academic/common parlance sense) which automatically makes one a misfit and a square peg in a round-holed life. Their out-of-the-box thoughts, attitudes, views, articulations AND out-of-the-box living completely alienates them from those surrounding their lives directly and indirectly who live their undistinguished life in a fool's paradise, completely 'unaware' and in a state of psychological stupor...all quite contentedly without missing anything. That is BLISS.
@porflepopnecker4376
@porflepopnecker4376 2 года назад
It's an odd movie but that's a big part of its appeal. I really like it. And I think it works in its own way. I don't agree with the dour assessment of it at the end of this otherwise very good documentary.
@markusdaxamouli5196
@markusdaxamouli5196 4 года назад
This was her best acting bybfar.. she was really just begining to find her skillset for becoming an actress of some note..too bad she was suffering those internal Demons and was finding the WRONG men to fall for...Honesty a Kennedy should be toxic ladies....and a Married Kennedy..damn.
@gregman1715
@gregman1715 7 месяцев назад
This Is One Of Marilyn's Best Movie's
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