Ralph Nelson – Charly (1968)


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Charly is a terrific dramatic production which is based on the novel written by Daniel Keyes. The feature was executive produced by Selig J. Seligman (The High Commissioner, Garrison’s Gorillas). Cliff Robertson stars as Charly in this impressive dramatic exploration of one man’s transformation from a impaired adult who struggles to formulate even his basic thoughts and words to an intelligent gentleman after undergoing an experimental procedure that turns the befuddled gent into a super-smart genius with world-class knowledge.As the storyline slowly unfolds, audiences who experience Charly get to see the inner turmoil and struggle of this mentally challenged man as he attempts to overcome his high degree of learning disabilities. Feeling shoehorned in by society while surrounded by his much smarter colleagues at work, Charly doesn’t wish to be written off altogether by those around him. Though his co-workers at the factory tend to poke fun at him daily his own inner strength pulls him towards achieving something greater and more rewarding in life.
Determined to prove that he is worth more than others think of him, Charly agrees to a test experiment and surgery which is life altering. He meets the beautiful and intelligent Alice Kinnian (Claire Bloom), who helps him along his newfound journey. The results? Society’s undervalued, learning-disabled man turns into one of the smartest people around. And Charly might just find some romance along the way, to boot.
The film has a impressive production aesthetic which is strengthened by the superb cinematography by Arthur J. Ornitz (Death Wish, Serpico). There are so many sequences in the film which feel enhanced from the scope of the visuals: from the experimental nature of the detailed study being conducted in the film to the outdoor landscapes of Charly swinging by on schoolyard swings. There is simply something compelling about this film’s visuals and its hypnotic style.
The music score is composed by the brilliant Ravi Shankar (Pather Panchali, Aparajito, The World of Apu) and is absolutely sublime. Having been a massive fan of his score collaborations with filmmaker Satyajit Ray and especially the work done on the brilliant Apu Trilogy, it was interesting to hear the Indian composer’s score style employed in a Hollywood production. While I wouldn’t say it reaches the same heights of some of his other work (from the Apu trilogy or the likes of tracks featured on the great Darjeeling Limited soundtrack)
The screenplay was written by Hollywood legend Stirling Stilliphant (In the Heat of the Night, The Towering Inferno). Though the storyline could have easily become overbearingly emotional or just downright offensive, the opposite is true. The film has the mark and craft of a genuine artist with a clear understanding of storytelling. Charly is a fully formed character and it’s fascinating to see the journey unfold for him as his life goes on such a peculiar swing-field of experiences while undergoing such a life-altering event as the brain-changing
Ralph Nelson (Lillies on the Field, Once a Thief) capably directs Charly with far more creativity than one would expect. Although the story feels like something which a Hollywood producer would want made into a typical drama, Nelson employ’s a much more arthouse style to the production with some interesting multi-panels in some scenes (bringing to mind De Palma’s Carrie and some of his other iconic works) as well as bringing a more artistic sensibility to the film’s conclusion. The creativity employed by Nelson can even be strongly felt through his choice of collaborators (especially in using Shankar for the score). Just like the character himself, Charly is a far better and more entertaining film than one expects.



Charly.1968.576p.BDRip-AVC.ZONE.mkv General Container: Matroska Runtime: 1 h 43 min Size: 2.48 GiB Video Codec: x264 Resolution: 1024x434 Aspect ratio: 2.35:1 Frame rate: 23.976 fps Bit rate: 3 000 kb/s BPP: 0.282 Audio #1: English 2.0ch AC-3 @ 224 kb/s #2: English 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 kb/s (Commentary by Film Historians Howard S. Berger and Nathaniel Thompson)
https://nitro.download/view/4E2FF2841D4D45A/Charly.1968.576p.BDRip-AVC.ZONE.mkv
Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, French, Spanish, Portuguese (Brazilian), Russian
Hello again. Is it possible to reupload this one? Thank you.
done..