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Charly

Charly (marketed and stylized as CHAЯLY) is a 1968 American drama film directed and produced by Ralph Nelson and written by Stirling Silliphant. It is based on Flowers for Algernon, a science-fiction short story (1958) and subsequent novel (1966) by Daniel Keyes.

Charly
1968 theatrical release poster
Directed byRalph Nelson
Screenplay byStirling Silliphant
Based onFlowers for Algernon
by Daniel Keyes
Produced byRalph Nelson
StarringCliff Robertson
Claire Bloom
Leon Janney
Lilia Skala
Dick Van Patten
CinematographyArthur J. Ornitz
Edited byFredric Steinkamp
Music byRavi Shankar
Production
companies
ABC Pictures
Robertson and Associates
Selmur Productions
Distributed byCinerama Releasing Corporation
Release dates
June 28, 1968 (Berlin)
September 23, 1968 (New York City)[1]
Running time
106 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2,225,000[3]
Box office$8,500,000 (rentals)[3]

The film stars Cliff Robertson as Charly Gordon, an intellectually disabled adult who is selected by two doctors to undergo a surgical procedure that triples his IQ as it had done for a laboratory mouse who underwent the same procedure. The film also stars Claire Bloom, Lilia Skala, Leon Janney, Dick Van Patten and Barney Martin. Robertson had played the same role in a 1961 television adaptation titled "The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon," an episode of the anthology series The United States Steel Hour.

The film received positive reviews and was a success at the box office and later in home media sales. Robertson won Best Actor at the Academy Awards.

Plot

Charly Gordon is an intellectually disabled man who lives in Boston. He has a desire to learn and has attended night school for two years, taking a class taught by Alice Kinnian. He learns to read and write, though his spelling and penmanship are poor and he is unable to spell his own name. He works as a janitor at a bakery, where his coworkers amuse themselves by taking advantage of his disability, and enjoys playing with children at a playground.

Alice takes Charly to researchers Dr. Richard Nemur and Dr. Anna Straus, who have been investigating methods for increasing intelligence. Having successfully tested a surgical procedure on a lab mouse named Algernon, they are looking for a human test subject. They put Charly through a battery of aptitude tests and have him try to solve a series of paper mazes while Algernon runs through models of them. Charly consistently loses to Algernon, but is selected for the surgery.

After surgery, Charly loses to Algernon again and is frustrated at not immediately becoming smarter. After some time passes, he finally beats Algernon and his intelligence begins to increase. His coworkers tell him to operate a complex machine, hoping that he will break it so they can have the day off, but he successfully operates it. Embarrassed and frightened by his new intelligence, they persuade the bakery owners to fire Charly. Alice continues teaching him, but his intelligence continues to increase and eventually surpasses hers. Lacking emotional maturity, Charly becomes infatuated with Alice and confesses his love for her, but she sharply rejects his advances. He flees in an act of rebellion but eventually returns to Boston, and the two start to consider marriage.

Nemur and Straus present their research at a convention. After playing the film of Charly's original aptitude tests, they bring him out for a question-and-answer session. His intelligence now equals or exceeds everyone in the audience, but he has also developed a cynical view of humanity that the attendees mistake for humor. He reveals that Algernon has lost his enhanced intelligence and died, facts that the research team kept from him, and expects to undergo a similar decline.

Charly overhears Alice, Nemur, and Straus discussing his situation and offers to assist in finding a way to preserve his intelligence, but their combined efforts prove fruitless. He falls into a depression and asks Alice never to visit him again. Some time later, Alice sees Charly playing with children on the playground, having fully regressed to his original level of intellectual disability.

Cast

Music by

Production history

Development

 
Photo from the 1961 television presentation "The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon", with Mona Freeman in the role of Alice

The short story Flowers for Algernon had been the basis of "The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon", a 1961 television adaptation in which Robertson had also starred for The United States Steel Hour.[4] Robertson had starred in a number of television shows that were turned into films with other actors playing his roles, such as Days of Wine and Roses. He bought the rights to the story, hoping to star in the film version as well.[5]

Robertson originally hired William Goldman to write the screenplay on the strength of Goldman's novel No Way to Treat a Lady, paying him $30,000 out of his own pocket.[6] However, Robertson was unhappy with Goldman's work and then hired Stirling Silliphant to write a draft.[7]

Robertson received only $25,000 for his role in the film.[8]

Release

The film premiered at the Berlin Film Festival on June 28, 1968.[1] It then opened at the Baronet Theatre in New York City on September 23, 1968.[1]

Box office

The film was a hit, earning $7.25 million in theatrical rentals during its release in North America, and it earned an additional $1.25 million in theatrical rentals overseas, making it the 16th-highest-grossing film of 1968.[9] After all costs were deducted (including $1,325,000 paid to profit share), the film reported a profit of $1,390,000, making it one of the few successful films made by Selmur/ABC Pictures.[3]

Critical reception

Vincent Canby called the film a "self-conscious contemporary drama, the first ever to exploit mental retardation for...the bittersweet romance of it"; he called Robertson's performance "earnest" but points out that "we [the audience] are forced into the vaguely unpleasant position of being voyeurs, congratulating ourselves for not being Charly as often as we feel a distant pity for him." Canby calls Nelson's direction "neo-Expo 67", referring to the use of split screen to "show simultaneously the reactions of two people facing each other and conversing" and the use of "little postage stamp-sized inserts of images within the larger screen frame."[10] Time magazine called Charly an "odd little movie about mental retardation and the dangers of all-conquering science, done with a dash of whimsy." While "the historic sights in and around Charly's Boston setting have never been more lovingly filmed", "The impact of [Robertson's] performance...is lessened by Producer-Director Ralph Nelson's determination to prove that he learned how to be new and now at Expo '67: almost every other sequence is done in split screens, multiple images, still shots or slow motion."[11] Screenwriter (and Hollywood blacklist target[12]) Maurice Rapf[13] called Robertson's performance "extraordinary" and called "astonishing" his on-screen "transformation from one end of the intellectual spectrum to the other"; Rapf took issue with what he called the "pyrotechnics of the camera" and the "flashy opticals", calling the effects "jarringly out of place" and better suited for a "no-story mod film like The Knack."[14]

Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four, writing "The relationship between Charly (Cliff Robertson) and the girl (Claire Bloom) is handled delicately and well. She cares for him, but inadequately understands the problems he's facing. These become more serious when he passes normal IQ and moves into the genius category; his emotional development falls behind. It is this story, involving a personal crisis, which makes Charly a warm and rewarding film." By contrast, Ebert pointed out "the whole scientific hocus-pocus, which causes his crisis, is irrelevant and weakens the movie by distracting us."[15]

In 2009, Entertainment Weekly listed Charly among its "25 Best Movie Tearjerkers Ever."[16]

Awards and nominations

Award Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards Best Actor Cliff Robertson Won
Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear Ralph Nelson Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Nominated
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Cliff Robertson Nominated
Best Screenplay – Motion Picture Stirling Silliphant Won
Hugo Awards[17] Best Dramatic Presentation Ralph Nelson (director), Stirling Silliphant (screenplay) and Daniel Keyes (original story) Nominated
Laurel Awards Top Drama Nominated
Top Male Dramatic Performance Cliff Robertson Nominated
National Board of Review Awards[18] Top Ten Films 4th Place
Best Actor Cliff Robertson Won

Cliff Robertson won the Academy Award for Best Actor, but under some controversy; less than two weeks after the ceremony, Time magazine mentioned the academy's generalized concerns over "excessive and vulgar solicitation of votes" and said that "many members agreed that Robertson's award was based more on promotion than on performance".[19]

Proposed sequel

In the late 1970s, following a period of extended unemployment after having alerted authorities to illegal activities committed by Columbia Pictures president David Begelman, Robertson wrote and attempted to produce Charly II, to no avail.[20]

Home media

Charly was released on Region 1 DVD by MGM Home Entertainment on March 31, 2005.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Charly at the American Film Institute Catalog
  2. ^ "Charly (1968): Original Print Information". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c "ABC's 5 Years of Film Production Profits & Losses", Variety, May 31, 1973, pg 3.
  4. ^ "Charly (1968): Notes". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  5. ^ Karen, Zraick (September 11, 2011). "Oscar-winner Cliff Robertson dies in US at 88". Associated Press. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  6. ^ Dennis Brown, Shoptalk, Newmarket Press, 1992 p 63
  7. ^ William Goldman, Adventures in the Screen Trade, 1982 p 164-176
  8. ^ Loynd, Ray (April 25, 1969). "No Flap Over Oscar Absence--Robertson". Los Angeles Times. p. i10.
  9. ^ "Top Grossing Films of 1968". Listal.com.
  10. ^ Vincent Canby (September 24, 1968). "The Screen: Cliff Robertson in Title Role of Charly". The New York Times. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  11. ^ . Time. October 18, 1968. Archived from the original on October 29, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  12. ^ "Maurice Rapf, 88, Screenwriter and Film Professor". The New York Times. April 18, 2003.
  13. ^ "Maurice Rapf". IMDb.
  14. ^ Maurice Rapf (November 1, 1968). "Is Charly Cuter Than Necessary?". Life. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  15. ^ Roger Ebert (December 31, 1968). "Charly". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  16. ^ "25 Best Movie Tearjerkers Ever". Entertainment Weekly. June 26, 2009. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  17. ^ "1969 Hugo Awards". World Science Fiction Society. July 26, 2007. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  18. ^ . National Board of Review. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  19. ^ "The Trade: Grand Illusion". Time. April 25, 1969. Retrieved March 25, 2011.[dead link]
  20. ^ Michelle Green (December 5, 1983). . People. 20 (23). Archived from the original on March 11, 2012. Retrieved March 25, 2011. Hoping to capitalize on his 1968 Oscar-winning role in Charly, playing a mentally retarded man who becomes, briefly, a genius, he wrote and began peddling Charly II, only to have the film's backers pull out.

External links

charly, other, uses, disambiguation, marketed, stylized, chaЯly, 1968, american, drama, film, directed, produced, ralph, nelson, written, stirling, silliphant, based, flowers, algernon, science, fiction, short, story, 1958, subsequent, novel, 1966, daniel, key. For other uses see Charly disambiguation Charly marketed and stylized as CHAYaLY is a 1968 American drama film directed and produced by Ralph Nelson and written by Stirling Silliphant It is based on Flowers for Algernon a science fiction short story 1958 and subsequent novel 1966 by Daniel Keyes Charly1968 theatrical release posterDirected byRalph NelsonScreenplay byStirling SilliphantBased onFlowers for Algernonby Daniel KeyesProduced byRalph NelsonStarringCliff RobertsonClaire BloomLeon JanneyLilia SkalaDick Van PattenCinematographyArthur J OrnitzEdited byFredric SteinkampMusic byRavi ShankarProductioncompaniesABC PicturesRobertson and AssociatesSelmur ProductionsDistributed byCinerama Releasing CorporationRelease datesJune 28 1968 Berlin September 23 1968 New York City 1 Running time106 minutes 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 2 225 000 3 Box office 8 500 000 rentals 3 The film stars Cliff Robertson as Charly Gordon an intellectually disabled adult who is selected by two doctors to undergo a surgical procedure that triples his IQ as it had done for a laboratory mouse who underwent the same procedure The film also stars Claire Bloom Lilia Skala Leon Janney Dick Van Patten and Barney Martin Robertson had played the same role in a 1961 television adaptation titled The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon an episode of the anthology series The United States Steel Hour The film received positive reviews and was a success at the box office and later in home media sales Robertson won Best Actor at the Academy Awards Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 2 1 Music by 3 Production history 3 1 Development 4 Release 5 Box office 6 Critical reception 7 Awards and nominations 8 Proposed sequel 9 Home media 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksPlot EditCharly Gordon is an intellectually disabled man who lives in Boston He has a desire to learn and has attended night school for two years taking a class taught by Alice Kinnian He learns to read and write though his spelling and penmanship are poor and he is unable to spell his own name He works as a janitor at a bakery where his coworkers amuse themselves by taking advantage of his disability and enjoys playing with children at a playground Alice takes Charly to researchers Dr Richard Nemur and Dr Anna Straus who have been investigating methods for increasing intelligence Having successfully tested a surgical procedure on a lab mouse named Algernon they are looking for a human test subject They put Charly through a battery of aptitude tests and have him try to solve a series of paper mazes while Algernon runs through models of them Charly consistently loses to Algernon but is selected for the surgery After surgery Charly loses to Algernon again and is frustrated at not immediately becoming smarter After some time passes he finally beats Algernon and his intelligence begins to increase His coworkers tell him to operate a complex machine hoping that he will break it so they can have the day off but he successfully operates it Embarrassed and frightened by his new intelligence they persuade the bakery owners to fire Charly Alice continues teaching him but his intelligence continues to increase and eventually surpasses hers Lacking emotional maturity Charly becomes infatuated with Alice and confesses his love for her but she sharply rejects his advances He flees in an act of rebellion but eventually returns to Boston and the two start to consider marriage Nemur and Straus present their research at a convention After playing the film of Charly s original aptitude tests they bring him out for a question and answer session His intelligence now equals or exceeds everyone in the audience but he has also developed a cynical view of humanity that the attendees mistake for humor He reveals that Algernon has lost his enhanced intelligence and died facts that the research team kept from him and expects to undergo a similar decline Charly overhears Alice Nemur and Straus discussing his situation and offers to assist in finding a way to preserve his intelligence but their combined efforts prove fruitless He falls into a depression and asks Alice never to visit him again Some time later Alice sees Charly playing with children on the playground having fully regressed to his original level of intellectual disability Cast EditCliff Robertson Charly Gordon Claire Bloom Alice Kinnian Lilia Skala Dr Anna Straus Leon Janney Dr Richard Nemur Ruth White Mrs Apple Dick Van Patten Bert as Richard Van Patten Edward McNally Gimpy as Skipper McNally Barney Martin Hank William Dwyer Joey Dan Morgan PaddyMusic by Edit Ravi ShankarProduction history EditDevelopment Edit Photo from the 1961 television presentation The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon with Mona Freeman in the role of Alice The short story Flowers for Algernon had been the basis of The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon a 1961 television adaptation in which Robertson had also starred for The United States Steel Hour 4 Robertson had starred in a number of television shows that were turned into films with other actors playing his roles such as Days of Wine and Roses He bought the rights to the story hoping to star in the film version as well 5 Robertson originally hired William Goldman to write the screenplay on the strength of Goldman s novel No Way to Treat a Lady paying him 30 000 out of his own pocket 6 However Robertson was unhappy with Goldman s work and then hired Stirling Silliphant to write a draft 7 Robertson received only 25 000 for his role in the film 8 Release EditThe film premiered at the Berlin Film Festival on June 28 1968 1 It then opened at the Baronet Theatre in New York City on September 23 1968 1 Box office EditThe film was a hit earning 7 25 million in theatrical rentals during its release in North America and it earned an additional 1 25 million in theatrical rentals overseas making it the 16th highest grossing film of 1968 9 After all costs were deducted including 1 325 000 paid to profit share the film reported a profit of 1 390 000 making it one of the few successful films made by Selmur ABC Pictures 3 Critical reception EditVincent Canby called the film a self conscious contemporary drama the first ever to exploit mental retardation for the bittersweet romance of it he called Robertson s performance earnest but points out that we the audience are forced into the vaguely unpleasant position of being voyeurs congratulating ourselves for not being Charly as often as we feel a distant pity for him Canby calls Nelson s direction neo Expo 67 referring to the use of split screen to show simultaneously the reactions of two people facing each other and conversing and the use of little postage stamp sized inserts of images within the larger screen frame 10 Time magazine called Charly an odd little movie about mental retardation and the dangers of all conquering science done with a dash of whimsy While the historic sights in and around Charly s Boston setting have never been more lovingly filmed The impact of Robertson s performance is lessened by Producer Director Ralph Nelson s determination to prove that he learned how to be new and now at Expo 67 almost every other sequence is done in split screens multiple images still shots or slow motion 11 Screenwriter and Hollywood blacklist target 12 Maurice Rapf 13 called Robertson s performance extraordinary and called astonishing his on screen transformation from one end of the intellectual spectrum to the other Rapf took issue with what he called the pyrotechnics of the camera and the flashy opticals calling the effects jarringly out of place and better suited for a no story mod film like The Knack 14 Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four writing The relationship between Charly Cliff Robertson and the girl Claire Bloom is handled delicately and well She cares for him but inadequately understands the problems he s facing These become more serious when he passes normal IQ and moves into the genius category his emotional development falls behind It is this story involving a personal crisis which makes Charly a warm and rewarding film By contrast Ebert pointed out the whole scientific hocus pocus which causes his crisis is irrelevant and weakens the movie by distracting us 15 In 2009 Entertainment Weekly listed Charly among its 25 Best Movie Tearjerkers Ever 16 Awards and nominations EditAward Category Nominee s ResultAcademy Awards Best Actor Cliff Robertson WonBerlin International Film Festival Golden Bear Ralph Nelson NominatedGolden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Drama NominatedBest Actor in a Motion Picture Drama Cliff Robertson NominatedBest Screenplay Motion Picture Stirling Silliphant WonHugo Awards 17 Best Dramatic Presentation Ralph Nelson director Stirling Silliphant screenplay and Daniel Keyes original story NominatedLaurel Awards Top Drama NominatedTop Male Dramatic Performance Cliff Robertson NominatedNational Board of Review Awards 18 Top Ten Films 4th PlaceBest Actor Cliff Robertson WonCliff Robertson won the Academy Award for Best Actor but under some controversy less than two weeks after the ceremony Time magazine mentioned the academy s generalized concerns over excessive and vulgar solicitation of votes and said that many members agreed that Robertson s award was based more on promotion than on performance 19 Proposed sequel EditIn the late 1970s following a period of extended unemployment after having alerted authorities to illegal activities committed by Columbia Pictures president David Begelman Robertson wrote and attempted to produce Charly II to no avail 20 Home media EditCharly was released on Region 1 DVD by MGM Home Entertainment on March 31 2005 citation needed See also EditList of American films of 1968 Charlie and Algernon a musical based upon the original story Flowers for Algernon Flowers for Algernon film a 2000 television film starring Matthew Modine as Charly References Edit a b c Charly at the American Film Institute Catalog Charly 1968 Original Print Information Turner Classic Movies Retrieved March 25 2011 a b c ABC s 5 Years of Film Production Profits amp Losses Variety May 31 1973 pg 3 Charly 1968 Notes Turner Classic Movies Retrieved March 25 2011 Karen Zraick September 11 2011 Oscar winner Cliff Robertson dies in US at 88 Associated Press Retrieved September 12 2011 Dennis Brown Shoptalk Newmarket Press 1992 p 63 William Goldman Adventures in the Screen Trade 1982 p 164 176 Loynd Ray April 25 1969 No Flap Over Oscar Absence Robertson Los Angeles Times p i10 Top Grossing Films of 1968 Listal com Vincent Canby September 24 1968 The Screen Cliff Robertson in Title Role of Charly The New York Times Retrieved March 25 2011 Cinema Medical Menace Time October 18 1968 Archived from the original on October 29 2010 Retrieved March 25 2011 Maurice Rapf 88 Screenwriter and Film Professor The New York Times April 18 2003 Maurice Rapf IMDb Maurice Rapf November 1 1968 Is Charly Cuter Than Necessary Life Retrieved March 25 2011 Roger Ebert December 31 1968 Charly Chicago Sun Times Retrieved March 25 2011 25 Best Movie Tearjerkers Ever Entertainment Weekly June 26 2009 Retrieved March 25 2011 1969 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society July 26 2007 Retrieved March 25 2011 Awards for 1968 National Board of Review Archived from the original on November 25 2010 Retrieved March 25 2011 The Trade Grand Illusion Time April 25 1969 Retrieved March 25 2011 dead link Michelle Green December 5 1983 Hollywood s Mr Clean Shot Down David Begelman Now the Actor Has Pulled His Career Out of a Nose Dive People 20 23 Archived from the original on March 11 2012 Retrieved March 25 2011 Hoping to capitalize on his 1968 Oscar winning role in Charly playing a mentally retarded man who becomes briefly a genius he wrote and began peddling Charly II only to have the film s backers pull out External links EditCharly at the American Film Institute Catalog Charly at AllMovie Charly at IMDb Charly at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charly amp oldid 1135876355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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