It’s hard to
avoid being salacious when telling the Marilyn Monroe story. She was raped, she
posed for nude photos on multiple occasions, she traded sexual favors for
career opportunities, and so on. The challenge for those dramatizing her life
is to integrate sensational elements tastefully—in other words, to avoid the
path taken by bottom-feeding hack Larry Buchanan while making Goodbye, Norma Jean. Starring onetime Hee-Haw honey Misty Rowe, this picture
is a compendium of titillating vignettes, as if young Norma Jean Baker spent every
waking moment of her life fending off unsolicited advances, then took control
of her destiny by becoming the equivalent of prostitute, exchanging sex for
screen tests until she finally won a legitimate role. There’s a grain of truth
in that version of events, but Buchanan’s storyline is so simplistic and tacky
as to be profoundly offensive. A sure sign of how little Buchanan cares about
historical accuracy is the fact that Rowe has bright blonde hair throughout the
movie, even though Norma Jean spent many of her pre-fame years as a brunette.
Yet perhaps the saddest thing about Goodbye,
Norma Jean is that it’s relatively watchable. The curvaceous Rowe appears
naked in many scenes, and the storyline moves along at a brisk pace as Norma
Jean leaves home, builds alliances, and suffers through one casting-couch
nightmare after another until making her dreams of stardom come true. Moreover,
the public’s enduring fascination with Monroe’s tragic life grants Goodbye, Norma Jean the illusion of
relevance. Yet this is unquestionably a sleazefest disguised as a biopic, so
even though Goodbye, Norma Jean is
competently filmed and has the occasional resonant moment, the picture demonstrates
that the indignities Monroe suffered did not end with her death; movies like
this one prolong an ugly cycle of objectification and violation.
Goodbye, Norma Jean: LAME
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