Martin Eden: DVD Review
Martin Eden is the very definition of a film festival film.
Artfully shot, with a central character who's lost in purpose and deep in love, and a protagonist whose looks are set to swoon.
And yet, it's all so painfully meandering and devoid of real emotion that Martin Eden becomes a slog not an uplifting experience.
Romanced by women, but ultimately adrift, he one day saves a lad from a beating on the docks and is taken home to say thanks. There he meets Jessica Cressy's Elena, and promptly falls in love.
But lacking an education and a sense of culture, he feels he's not worthy and so sets out to better himself - all the while clashing with the world he's come from.
There's no denying Pietro Marcello's adaptation of Jack London's Martin Eden is beautifully shot.
On 16mm film and lensed with subtlety and with throwback soundtrack, it feels like the essence of a coastal Italian holiday, complete with lots of good looking people and working classes mingling and clashing.
But the heart is missing within, making Martin Eden feel like the characters are just that - certainly Elena is nothing more than a doll speaking lines, and it's distracting.
Marinelli makes a more likeable lead, with his old time good looks marking him out from the crowds and showing his conflict within the classes.
However, ultimately, this tale of self-education is a little too self-obsessed and brooding to appeal to the masses. Its self identity is lacking, and while its wafting qualities are committed well to the screen, its final feeling is one sadly of indifference.
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