The King of Marvin Gardens Page #9

Synopsis: 'It's Monopoly out there'. Jason Staebler, The King of Marvin Gardens, has gone directly to jail, lives on the Boardwalk and fronts for the local mob in Atlantic City. He is also a dreamer who asks his brother, David, a radio personality from Philadelphia to help him build a paradise on a Pacific Island - asking him to believe in yet another of his dreams, yet another of his get-rich-quick schemes. But luck is against them both and the game ends badly - real life reduced to radio drama.
Genre: Drama
Director(s): Bob Rafelson
Production: Sony Pictures Entertainment
 
IMDB:
6.6
Rotten Tomatoes:
71%
R
Year:
1972
103 min
315 Views


I'll shoot you, and then your little brother

David can run off with my Jessie...

- and live happily ever after!

- [Door Opens]

- They'll probably pin a medal on me!

- What's going on?

Your mother's gonna murder one of us.

So far the only one

she hasn't nominated is you.

I can see it right now. "Matron Slays Three

in Seashore Love Nest." Headline material.

- [Grunts]

- [Jessica Screams]

[Screaming]

[Shower Running]

Oh, please, go off.

[Whimpers]

[Sobbing]

Oh.

Oh.

Oh.

[Dog Whining]

[Horn Blows]

There was no way that...

the middle-aged Kewpie doll

really thought...

that Miss America was in the cards.

The dinners with -

[Sighs]

the Japanese businessmen in bibs...

and...

the latest come-on with Lili's dolphins...

all seemed harmless.

No sense in not going along

for the ride...

and not enjoying the games...

when...

that's what the trip seemed to be about.

No need not to speculate

what your hero was doing...

behind the doors...

late at night when you couldn't sleep.

The goals didn't seem serious for moments.

Then certainly nothing more serious

could happen.

Maybe there even would be a trip...

to blue Hawaii.

I certainly didn't want to stop it.

But in the fun house...

how do you know who's really crazy?

How do you know...

that it's supposed to be you...

that stops it right now?

[Sobbing]

Only you don't know how to stop it.

The gun was...

always with the water pistols.

[Gasps]

[Exhales]

Until Wednesday...

this has been your host, David Staebler.

[Sniffles]

The program is Etcetera.

What are you looking at this for?

Do you know what time it is?

Don't worry about me. I'm all right.

Oh, I'm sorry.

It's okay. I know you didn't mean it.

- Good night.

- Good night.

[Coughing]

[Coughing Continues]

[Coughs, Clears Throat]

[Coughing Continues]

[Coughing Continues]

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Jacob Brackman

Jacob Brackman (born 1943) is an American journalist, writer, and musical lyricist. After graduating from Harvard University in 1965, he went to work for Newsweek as a journalist. He remained there for six months and was then hired by The New Yorker. He subsequently worked as a film critic at Esquire magazine from 1969 until 1972. He met Carly Simon in 1968 when they were both working as counselors at a summer camp in the Berkshires. The two became close friends. Most of Simon's albums include one or two songs co-written with Brackman; typically, Simon writes the music and Brackman writes the lyrics. Among the dozens of songs they have written together are the top ten hits, "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be" (1971) and "Haven't Got Time for the Pain" (1974), both of which were sung by Simon. The lyrics to the Broadway musical King of Hearts were also written by Brackman, and so, too, were the screenplays for The King of Marvin Gardens (1972) and Times Square (1980). He has also collaborated musically with James Taylor, Steve Winwood, Dr. John, Fred Astaire, Michel Polnareff and Dionne Warwick. He was the executive producer for the acclaimed Terrence Malick film, Days of Heaven (1978). He married the late Mindy Jostyn, and co-authored the lyrics on her CDs. Jacob Brackman has been an influence to many other artists, including Welsh rock group the Manic Street Preachers. See article on the film Times Square for more. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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