I love a mystery! So my expectations were high about The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes. Granted, it’s exciting to see some beautiful clips of Monroe in all her glory. But listening to tapes of people who knew her speaking on phones or other recording devices did not work out well. Many of those scenes include actors lip syncing real people, but that seemed too stagey for me.
However, director Emma Cooper made sure the ups and downs
of Monroe’s career, marriages and mental health problems received coverage in this
uneven documentary. Fortunately, we get glimpses of wonderful films where
Monroe displays her talents as an actress and entertainer. I enjoyed watching
the clips of Some Like It Hot, The Seven
Year Itch, and Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes. But I felt sad seeing how different she looked in her last movie, The Misfits.
It was also hard to take reliving the downfall of her
marriages to baseball great Joe DiMaggio and the famous playwright Arthur
Miller. Also, the way this documentary presents Monroe’s last few days made me
tear up again. What WAS her relationship to the Kennedy brothers, Bobby and
JFK? Did they have her killed as scandal sheets suspected?
Marilyn
Monroe died too soon.
The
heights she reached? Over the moon!
A
film icon with fans galore,
she
always wanted even more.
Abandonment
she feared mostly
and turned to drugs so frequently.
Was
Monroe’s death a suicide?
New
documentary has tried
to
find the truth about this mess.
We
hear on tapes that could be less.
Most the info we’ve heard before.
about
this star many adore.
Most of the tape information came from Anthony Summers, a
journalist who wrote a book about Marilyn Monroe called “Goddess.” And although
the official investigation into Monroe’s death declared it was the result of a
barbiturate overdose, Summers wanted to find out the truth. He rounded up as
many tapes of interviews as possible and he conducted many of his own, which he
taped, of course. About the night of Monroe’s death, various discrepancies were
discovered.
My conclusion? We will never know the truth. But we do
know Marilyn Monroe, who died at only 36 years old, left an incredible movie
legacy that will still live on for many years to come.
I am good but not an angel. I do sin, but I
am not the devil. I am just a small girl in a big world trying to find someone
to love.” --- Marilyn Monroe
(Released by Netflix and rated “TV-MA”)
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