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- <text id=93TT0158>
- <title>
- Aug. 09, 1993: Reviews:Television
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 09, 1993 Lost Secrets Of The Maya
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 57
- TELEVISION
- Some Like It Hot
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>SHOW: Marilyn & Bobby: Her Final Affair</l>
- <l>TIME: Aug. 4, 9 P.M. EDT, USA</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: The final insult.
- </p>
- <p> The California sun sparkles through the palm trees. The movie
- star, her platinum hair shielded from the wind by a scarf, drives
- up in a turquoise convertible. Her boyfriend, dressed incongruously
- in suit and tie, leaps into the car with a boyish bounce. "Let's
- go, Monroe," he chirps. She replies: "Yes, sir, Mr. Attorney
- General."
- </p>
- <p> Oliver Stone was attacked for stretching the facts about the
- Kennedy assassination in JFK. Author Joe McGinniss is getting
- slammed for inventing thoughts and dialogue for his new biography
- of Ted Kennedy. If no similar outcry greets Marilyn & Bobby:
- Her Final Affair, it is because tawdry "fact-based" TV movies
- have become too common to get riled over. This one, moreover,
- inoculates itself with a disclaimer at the outset: "A fictionalized
- account inspired by the public lives of Marilyn Monroe and Robert
- F. Kennedy." None of which can entirely excuse this USA Network
- movie from responsibility for breaking new ground in docudrama
- shamelessness.
- </p>
- <p> The film cobbles together its story line from every half-baked
- rumor that ever surfaced about the famous pair. Bobby and Marilyn
- had a torrid affair, we learn, that was witnessed almost every
- step of the way by surveillance men hired by Jimmy Hoffa. The
- Teamsters boss even orders Bobby killed, but the would-be assassin,
- after training his telescopic sight on the couple smooching
- in a park, chickens out. Good thing, since Mafia boss Sam Giancana
- shortly thereafter tells Hoffa to lay off because the Mob is
- "doing a little business" with the Kennedy brothers.
- </p>
- <p> Hoffa isn't the only one monitoring the affair. FBI director
- J. Edgar Hoover (whose phone is answered in the middle of the
- night by the fellow sharing his bed) blackmails Bobby with damaging
- photos. That forces Kennedy to break off the affair, which leaves
- Marilyn so distraught that she takes a fatal overdose of sleeping
- pills. The suicide scene is the film's lunatic climax: so many
- people scurry in and out of Marilyn's house as the actress lies
- dying (among them Peter Lawford, Bobby himself and an ambulance
- team that rushes her to the hospital and then back again, under
- orders from the FBI) that it looks like the stateroom sequence
- from A Night at the Opera.
- </p>
- <p> The psychological portraits are no less ludicrous. Marilyn loves
- Bobby for his mind. "It must be so exciting," she coos. "You
- have all the right answers before anybody else even has the
- questions!" Bobby loves Marilyn for her...mind too: "How
- as an actor can you get inside someone's mind? I read somewhere
- it's called Method acting. What is that?" Any complications
- to this storybook romance--Bobby's wife and kids, for example--are kept safely offstage.
- </p>
- <p> For all its bubbleheadedness, Marilyn & Bobby is slickly mounted.
- Melody Anderson and James F. Kelly (who played R.F.K. in three
- previous TV movies) do passable impersonations, and director
- Bradford May keeps the close-ups tight and the action fast;
- the re-created Senate-hearing clashes between Kennedy and Hoffa
- are more convincing than anything Danny DeVito managed in Hoffa.
- If Marilyn & Bobby were not about two historical figures whose
- actual lives--as opposed to the fantasies people continue
- to build around them--still matter to us, Marilyn & Bobby
- could possibly be dismissed as harmless fun. But it is, and
- it can't.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-