Synopsis
The tale of an individualist proletarian in a time marked by the rise of mass political movements. In early 20th-century Italy, illiterate sailor Martin Eden seeks fame as a writer while torn between the love of a bourgeois girl and allegiance to his social class.
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Cast
- Luca MarinelliMartin Eden
- Jessica CressyElena Orsini
- Vincenzo NemolatoNino
- Marco LeonardiBernardo
- Elisabetta ValgoiMatilde Orsini
- Pietro RagusaMr. Orsini
- Carlo CecchiRuss Brissenden
- Aniello ArenaFrançois
- Chiara FranciniNora
- Rinat KhismatoulineCaporale
- 100
The Playlist
Marcello brilliantly captures the circular nature of the perpetual expanse between the working class and the elite in the dense characterization of his subjects and the dialogue surrounding the rejection of Martin’s early writing. - 88
Boston Globe
The tragedy of this grand and artful movie is that the individuality Martin craves to make him stand out leaves him in the end standing very much alone. - 88
Chicago Tribune
Pietro Marcello’s sweeping historical Italian epic Martin Eden is a whole lot of movie. It possesses a weight and heft, both cinematically and philosophically, that make it a rare treat. And at the center of the film is a whole lot of movie star: Luca Marinelli’s performance in the title role is an outstanding star turn for the Italian actor. - 83
The A.V. Club
Yet without dumbing down its message, Marcello’s sweeping Künstlerroman has all the pleasurable characteristics of a simmering romance and a poignant tragedy, too. - 63
Slant Magazine
Pietro Marcello’s film works better as a story of self-loathing and self-destruction than it does as a social critique or political statement. - 60
Screen Daily
Marcello and his committed, compelling lead actor Luca Marinelli deliver an always watchable take on the hoary old story of the struggling artist that is more interesting in its shape-shifting style and texture than in its rather conventional dramatic core. - 58
IndieWire
This spry yet increasingly bitter romantic drama is so vague and un-targeted that its social critiques feel less defined than ever. The anger is palpable, but its targets are hard to pinpoint. - 50
The Hollywood Reporter
Marcello never quite manages to shoehorn in both more than a century’s worth of European struggles and sociopolitical thinking and the full story of Eden’s downfall after he’s finally become successful. Indeed, these weighty concerns capsize the entire enterprise in the final stretch, where the story runs aground on an iceberg of undigested ideas, barely developed themes and bad hair choices.