An incredible story of Mary and Max
was made by Australian director Adam Elliot in 2009.
Two lonely souls, the meeting of which is
impossible in real life, find each other and become penpals. Mary Daisy Dinkle is an
eight-year-old girl from Australia with the eyes of "the colour of muddy
puddles" and a birthmark of "the colour of poo".
And Max Jerry Horowitz who is a lonely 44-year-old
Jewish atheist from New York , "smells like licorice and old books" and
whose circle of friends consists of TV
set, personal psychoanalyst and a sick aquarium fish.
A gray world, in which Max and Mary live,
is full of annoying sounds, unpleasant scents, and even the Statue of Liberty
looks pretty beaten up by life. But this no longer saddens neither the girl nor
the man: their lifelong dream of finding a friend has finally come true. Now
they have one thing to do: Mary - learning how to love yourself, Max - overcoming
the nervous attacks that appear every time he reads a new Mary’s letter.(see fig.1)
Figure 1. Max's nervous attack (2014)
The reason for the penpalling was Mary’s
puzzling question: "Where babies come from in America". Mary says
that in Australia children are found in beer mugs, then in America they should come
from cola cans. Mr. Horowitz, whose was randomly selected from the phone book
of New York, senses his soul mate on the opposite side of the planet and answers
Mary’s question. In addition to a naive and honest view of the world of these
two different people, it turned out that they have a passion for chocolate
bars, some cartoon about creatures living in a teapot and utter social
dysfunction.
"Mary and Max" mostly consists
of various quotes from conversation of these two characters, which are well-read
by voice-overs, skillfully and funny acted out by dolls(puppets) and arranged
in chronological order: first letters
date back to the mid-70's, the last - the beginning of the 90's.
. Narrated by clever shots, this gray
story of "Mary and Max" is very far from the Hollywood tearjerker. As Adam
Elliot said himself :"It's
not the sort of story you'd see from (Hollywood studios) DreamWorks or Pixar.F
It deals with different or marginalized characters"(Bob Tourtellotte,
2009) This picture has black humor and, along with kindness, it sends a strong
message to all of us that" "Friends are the family we choose for
ourselves"."Mary and Max" is a tragicomedy. On the one hand, you
cannot remain indifferent to different topics and events that unfold there. But
on the other hand, all tragic moments are flavored with humor and a little
touch of self-irony. One genre very neatly and quickly intertwines with another.
Luke Buckmaster(2009) is correct when he states that "One moment we're watching the blogs of plasticine make poo jokes,
and the next we're confronted by heartrending explorations of heavy things -
mental illness, alcoholism, loneliness, sociology."
Figure 2. Mary and Max "meeting" (2015)
Despite all the gloom and emotional stress,
this film leaves a ray of light in all of us. After all, despite all the
obstacles, tragedies, diseases and phobias, this friendship lasted until the
very end. Tears in a bottle(see fig.3), clumsy drawings, chocolates, cans of condensed
milk, alternative versions of where the children come from and confessions of
two people that will never meet - all these little things of which our life
consists, are enough to cause a smile, not only on your face, but also in your heart.
As Andrew Todd(2015) said: "Mary and
Max is a classic of animated cinema, effortlessly eliciting the holy grail of
audience reactions: laughter through tears."
Figure 3. Mary's tears for Max who does not cry (2014)
Bibliography:
1. Tourtellotte, B. (2009) Sundance opens with hope for indie film. At: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-sundance-opening/sundance-opens-with-hope-for-indie-film-idUSTRE50F05Z20090116 (Accessed on 31 January 2018)
2. Buckmaster, L. (2009) Mary and Max film review: plasticine-powered profundities. At: https://blogs.crikey.com.au/cinetology/2009/04/09/plasticine-powered-profundities-film-review-mary-and-max/ (Accessed on 31 January 2018)
3. Todd, A. (2015) Love Yourself First: Mental Illness In MARY AND MAX. At: http://birthmoviesdeath.com/2015/06/19/love-yourself-first-mental-illness-in-mary-and-max (Accessed on 31 January 2018)
Illustrations:
1. Figure 1. Newbutt, N. (2014)[Film Still] https://blog.animationstudies.org/?p=704, accessed on 1 February 2018.
2. Figure 2. Alves, M.(2015)[Film Still] https://milcaretas.com/2015/03/20/mary-e-max-uma-amizade-diferente/, accessed on 1 February 2018.
3. Figure 3. Lavine, M.M.(2014)[Film Still] https://reeltalk.areavoices.com/2014/05/22/indiewatch-mary-and-max-a-heavy-hitting-claymation-delight/, accessed on 1 February 2018.
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