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==Reception==
'']'' magazine called the film a "standard" production, and criticized Bogdanovich for using real-life interview footage in the film: "Bogdanovich layers in archival material like newspaper headlines and stills of the real Wood, as well as talking-head interviews with her surviving relatives and friends, a choice that brings little to the proceedings, since whatever stories the witnesses tell are subsequently presented in painfully literal tableaux." Its reviewer praised the cast, though, for its performances: "ustine Waddell is competent and appealing; she's no Judy Davis, but she avoids the biopic trap of overly mannered impersonation. Indistinguishable Ken dolls Michael Weatherly and Matthew Settle offer uncanny vocal impressions of Robert Wagner and Warren Beatty, while Alice Krige (Star Trek's Borg Queen) is perfect as Maria, Natalie's monstrous, self-mythologizing Russian mother, who pulls the wings off butterflies to get little Nat to cry on cue."<ref>{{cite web |title=Fallen Star |url=http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/television/2004/03/fallen_star.html|date=March 2, 2004|work='']''|accessdate=2012-09-24}}</ref>


==References== ==References==

Revision as of 16:47, 24 September 2012

2004 American film
The Mystery of Natalie Wood
Directed byPeter Bogdanovich
Written bySuzanne Finstad (novel)
Warren G. Harris (novel)
Elizabeth Egloff
Produced byRichard Fischoff
Randy Sutter
StarringJustine Waddell
Michael Weatherly
Matthew Settle
Colin Friels
Elizabeth Rice
and Alice Krige
CinematographyJohn Stokes
Edited byScott Vickrey
Music byRichard Marvin
Distributed byABC
Release dateMarch 1, 2004
Running time172 minutes
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish

The Mystery of Natalie Wood is a two-part 2004 made-for-tv biographical film directed by Peter Bogdanovich. Partly based on the biographies Natasha: the Biography of Natalie Wood written by Suzanne Finstad and Natalie & R.J. written by Warren G. Harris, the film chronicles the life and career of actress Natalie Wood, from the part of her early childhood in the 1940s until her untimely death in 1981.

Plot

Part 1

The film opens on November 28, 1981 at Catalina Island, California, where 43-year-old Natalie Wood (Justine Waddell) falls off her boat called 'Splendour' and drowns. Years earlier, in 1943 Santa Rosa, California, 5-year-old Natasha (Grace Fulton) grows up in a violent household with an overbearing mother, Maria Gurdin (Alice Krige), who goes to extremes to make her daughter a star. When one day a film is shot in town, Maria arranges a role for Natasha, and kills a butterfly in order to get her to cry in front of the camera, which is required. Her crying impresses the director, Irving Pichel (John Noble), and a year later she reluctantly moves to Hollywood to focus on her career, with her mother standing by her at every step, and with a new name: Natalie Wood. By 1946, Natalie is working three films at a time, and is not allowed to enjoy any spare time with friends. Three years later, now teenaged (Elizabeth Rice), she can do nothing as her older sister Olga (Leanne Simic) leaves the home because she feels neglected by her mother. Around this time, she is working on the set of The Green Promise one day, when an accident causes her to break her wrist. Fearing that her daughter will not get any roles if she has it treated, Maria dismisses any medical help, and Natalie's wrist does not heal properly as a result.

While in high school, 15-year-old Natalie falls in love with school friend Jimmy, and starts to rebel against her mother, who prohibits her to see Jimmy Williams (Jason Smith) because she fears that she will get pregnant. Maria manipulates Natalie into giving up her plans of marrying Jimmy, and after breaking off the engagement, Jimmy shoots himself, leaving Natalie heartbroken. Afterwards, she breaks any ties with her mother and focuses on her career. By the mid-50's, she (Waddell) and her friend Margaret O'Brien (Sophie Mentis) decide that she should play the female lead in Rebel without a Cause opposite James Dean (Nick Carpenter). In order to get the role, she allows herself to be seduced by director Nicholas Ray (Robert Taylor)). Following a car accident caused by Dennis Hopper (Jarrod Dean), she is cast in the film. Simultaneously, she auditions for director Roy Tremaine (Andy Rodoreda) to please her mother, but he rapes her. Fearing that it would destroy her career, she does not report the crime. Instead, she focuses on Rebel, which turns out to be a great success. Natalie reaches star fame and becomes romantically involved with many Hollywood men. Worried about her many boyfriends, Maria sets her up with Robert Wagner (Michael Weatherly), an actor whom she adored since she were a child.

Shortly before they are married, Natalie promises her mother that she will not have any babies with him, even though she wants to have them. By 1959, she starts to estrange herself from Robert and meets up with her therapist often to discuss her troubled childhood and wish to have a baby. Meanwhile, she heads out to New York City to work on a new film with Elia Kazan (Christopher Pate): Splendor in the Grass. The film requires her to take off her clothes and show the camera her sprained wrist, which upsets her. In a later scene, she has to swim in the water, for which she has a terrible fear because her mother told her as a child that she would one day drown. She eventually overcomes her fear and celebrates with her co-star Warren Beatty (Matthew Settle), which makes her husband grow more jealous of her interaction with other men. As she becomes more occupied with filming West Side Story, Robert announces to divorce Natalie because he never sees her anymore, and has trouble seeing her rise to great successes, while he has trouble obtaining film roles.

Part 2

The film continues to reflect on her marriage with Robert Wagner, as well as her relationship with Warren Beatty. Natalie's nightmare of drowning comes true, when in 1981 she falls off a boat and drowns in the freezing water.

Cast

Reception

Slate magazine called the film a "standard" production, and criticized Bogdanovich for using real-life interview footage in the film: "Bogdanovich layers in archival material like newspaper headlines and stills of the real Wood, as well as talking-head interviews with her surviving relatives and friends, a choice that brings little to the proceedings, since whatever stories the witnesses tell are subsequently presented in painfully literal tableaux." Its reviewer praised the cast, though, for its performances: "ustine Waddell is competent and appealing; she's no Judy Davis, but she avoids the biopic trap of overly mannered impersonation. Indistinguishable Ken dolls Michael Weatherly and Matthew Settle offer uncanny vocal impressions of Robert Wagner and Warren Beatty, while Alice Krige (Star Trek's Borg Queen) is perfect as Maria, Natalie's monstrous, self-mythologizing Russian mother, who pulls the wings off butterflies to get little Nat to cry on cue."

References

  1. "Fallen Star". Slate. March 2, 2004. Retrieved 2012-09-24. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)

External links

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