Mary and Max: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{tropework}}
[[File:max2.jpg|frame]]
 
{{quote| ''Sometimes perfect strangers make the best friends...'' }}
 
A 2009 Australian clay-animated film written and directed by Adam Elliot., Thethe emotionally powerful '''''Mary and Max''''' appears to have been overshadowed by such recent, better-known stop[[Stop Motion]] motionsfilms as ''[[Coraline (Filmanimation)|Coraline]]'' and ''[[The Fantastic Mr. Fox]]'', as well as the fact that it falls [[What Do You Mean ItsIt's Not for Kids?|smack bang into the middle of the]] [[Animation Age Ghetto]].
 
Set in the 1970-90's90s, and ''supposedly'' [[Very Loosely Based Onon a True Story]], ''Mary and Max'' tells the story of a friendship between two unlikely pen pals: Mary, a lonely 8-year-old girl living in the suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, and Max, an obese 44-year old man living in New York City {{spoiler|who is eventually diagnosed as having Asperger's Syndrome}}. The movie follows the story of their life and friendship over the course of Mary's childhood and adulthood. What appears to start out as a solely blackly humourous story soon turns into something quite dark and [[Tear Jerker|often very depressing]], dealing with everything from parental neglect, to insecurity, to bullying, to suicide.
 
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{{tropelist}}
=== This film provides examples of: ===
* [[Abusive Parents]]: Mary's are mostly neglectful and preoccupied, though her mother also calls her fat and ugly.
* [[The Alcoholic]]: Mary's mother, who is in denial about it.
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* [[Big Eater]]: Max, although it only contributes to his obesity.
* [[Billing Displacement]]: Toni Collette gets top billing for playing adult Mary despite only showing up during the final half-hour of the film. The narrator, Hoffman (Max) and Whitmore (Young Mary) have more lines than she does.
* [[Birth -Death Juxtaposition]]: {{spoiler|Mary and her baby arrive to visit Max just after he's died.}}
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|Max forgives Mary and she comes to visit him for the first time with her newborn baby... only to find that he passed away, albeit peacefully, on the very morning that she arrives}}.
** And then {{spoiler|Mary looks ''up'' to see that Max has laminated all of her letters and [[Tear Jerker|attached them to the ceiling]] in his home}}.
* [[Black Comedy]]
* [[Blind Without 'Em]]: Ivy, Max's neighbor.
* [[Bottle Fairy]]: Mary's mother Vera. Oh so much.
* [[Brainy Brunette]]: Mary fits the trope well, although her hair is closer to black.
* [[Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick]]: Max unintentionally does this in his letters.
{{quote| '''Max''': "Do you have a pet kangaroo? When I was born, my father left my mother and me on a kibbutz. She shot herself with my uncle's gun when I was 6. Do you like chocolate hot dogs?"}}
* [[Brutal Honesty]]: Max, occasionally, {{spoiler|as a symptom of his Asperger's}}.
* [[Cannot Tell a Joke]]: Max.
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* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Mary.}}
* [[Everyone Hates Mimes]]: Except for someone with a mental disorder, apparently.
* [[Finger in Thethe Mail]]: Parodied. It's a key from Max's typewriter.
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: The in-universe cartoon "The ''Nob''lets" could be considered this: take a close look at their designs...
* [[Grave Humor]]: On the headstone for Mary's grandfather; "Born in a barn in the hills of Baronia/ lived a full life, then died of pneumonia." {{spoiler|Later, similarly appropriate quips are written on those of her parents.}}
* [[Happier Times Montage]]: One plays in the background as Mary prepares to {{spoiler|commit suicide}}.
* [[Heroic BSOD]]: Max and Mary each have one.
* [[Hey, ItsIt's That Voice!]]: Waaait, Phillip Seymour Hoffman?
** Also, the narrator is Barry Humphries, aka Dame Edna Everage.
* [[Hollywood Atheist]]: Averted. Max doesn't believe in God because he's "read many books that prove God is a figment of [his] imagination". Despite this, he doesn't really make much of a big deal about it.
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* [[Intergenerational Friendship]]
* [[Interrupted Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Mary's}}.
* [[ItsIt's All Junk]]: After her [[Despair Event Horizon]], Mary has her book pulped, even though it made her a famous psychologist.
* [[Literal -Minded]]: Max. He even lampshades this trait of his.
* [[Malaproper]]: Mary, to humorous effect - though only when she's a child.
* [[Mood Whiplash]]: It bounces back and forth between sad, upbeat, funny and disturbing throughout the entire movie.
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* [[Narrator]]
* [[National Geographic Nudity]]: Max likes to read ''National Geographic'', but the nude pictorials in it don't faze him in the slightly, since he's asexual.
* [[Nerd]]: Max and, arguably, Mary too.
* [[Nerd Glasses]]: Mary has them.
* {{spoiler|[[No Kill Like Overkill]]: Mary tries to commit suicide by swallowing pills and hanging herself at the same time.}}
* [[No Social Skills]]: Both of them, but Max especially.
* [[Oblivious to Love]]: Max.
* [[Odd Friendship]]: The plot of the whole movie.
* [[One -Woman Wail]]: When Vera finds Max's first letter.
* [[Parental Abandonment]]: Max's folks.
* [[Punny Name]]: Many of the minor characters, eg. Max's dentist.
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* [[Rhythm Typewriter]]: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-aN6Kd6ynY Max on his typewriter].
* [[Ripped From the Phone Book]]: How Mary got Max's address; she just picked a random name from the listings at the post office.
* [[Screwed Byby the Network]]: In the US, IFC chose to release it straight-to-DVD instead of giving it a theatrical release like other countries. As a result, the film was ineligible for Oscar nominations (a Best Animated Feature nomination was expected had it gone to theatres).
* [[Shout -Out]]:
** One to ''[[A Charlie Brown Christmas]]'' (the doctor is "in").
** Another to Oliver Sacks; Mary is seen reading his book ''The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat''.
** Another to [[Audrey Hepburn]] in ''[[Breakfast Atat TiffanysTiffany's]]''.
** At one point, Max wears a shirt saying "aspies for freedom", which is the name of a real Asperger's rights organisation.
* [[Someone to Remember Him By]]
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* [[Spinning Paper]]
* [[Strongly Worded Letter]]: Writing them is a pastime of Max's.
* [[Tear Jerker]]: So, so many.
* [[Timeshifted Actor]]: Bethany Whitmore plays Mary as a child. Toni Collette plays her as an adult.
* [[Too Dumb to Live]]: Lots of unwise decisions get made, but none worse than that of the mime. If he had time to dig out an umbrella and open it tremblingly, he could've used that time to get out of the way.
* [[Trademark Favorite Food]]: [[EverythingsEverything's Better Withwith Chocolate|Chocolate]], for both of them.
* [[The Un -Smile]]: Max's attempt to display "happiness".
* [[Very Loosely Based Onon a True Story]]: Apart from the director's twenty year friendship with the source for the Max character {{spoiler|(who was ''still'' alive at the time of the film's release and might still be today)}}, mostly fiction.
* [[What Do You Mean ItsIt's Not Awesome?]]: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-aN6Kd6ynY The definitive using-a-typewriter scene, people].
* [[Write Who You Know]]: As in all of Adam Elliot's films, the characters are mostly based on real people. Max, for example, is based on Elliot's pen-friend.
* [[Yiddish Asas a Second Language]]
* [[You Have to Have Jews]]
 
{{reflist}}
{{OIAF Grand Prize Winners}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Animated Films]]
[[Category:Australian Movies]]
[[Category:Dramedy]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:MaryWestern And MaxAnimation]]
[[Category:TropeWestern Animation of the 2000s]]

Latest revision as of 15:03, 11 November 2021

Sometimes perfect strangers make the best friends...

A 2009 Australian clay-animated film written and directed by Adam Elliot, the emotionally powerful Mary and Max appears to have been overshadowed by such recent, better-known Stop Motion films as Coraline and The Fantastic Mr. Fox, as well as the fact that it falls smack bang into the middle of the Animation Age Ghetto.

Set in the 1970-90s, and supposedly Very Loosely Based on a True Story, Mary and Max tells the story of a friendship between two unlikely pen pals: Mary, a lonely 8-year-old girl living in the suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, and Max, an obese 44-year old man living in New York City who is eventually diagnosed as having Asperger's Syndrome. The movie follows the story of their life and friendship over the course of Mary's childhood and adulthood. What appears to start out as a solely blackly humourous story soon turns into something quite dark and often very depressing, dealing with everything from parental neglect, to insecurity, to bullying, to suicide.

Tropes used in Mary and Max include:
  • Abusive Parents: Mary's are mostly neglectful and preoccupied, though her mother also calls her fat and ugly.
  • The Alcoholic: Mary's mother, who is in denial about it.
  • Anachronism Stew
  • Asexual: Max, which makes it doubly funny that Mary asks him where babies come from in America.
  • Babies Ever After
  • Bi the Way: Probably the best way to describe Damien as he does show some genuine interest in Mary at times.
  • Big Applesauce
  • Big Eater: Max, although it only contributes to his obesity.
  • Billing Displacement: Toni Collette gets top billing for playing adult Mary despite only showing up during the final half-hour of the film. The narrator, Hoffman (Max) and Whitmore (Young Mary) have more lines than she does.
  • Birth-Death Juxtaposition: Mary and her baby arrive to visit Max just after he's died.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Max forgives Mary and she comes to visit him for the first time with her newborn baby... only to find that he passed away, albeit peacefully, on the very morning that she arrives.
  • Black Comedy
  • Blind Without'Em: Ivy, Max's neighbor.
  • Bottle Fairy: Mary's mother Vera. Oh so much.
  • Brainy Brunette: Mary fits the trope well, although her hair is closer to black.
  • Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: Max unintentionally does this in his letters.

Max: "Do you have a pet kangaroo? When I was born, my father left my mother and me on a kibbutz. She shot herself with my uncle's gun when I was 6. Do you like chocolate hot dogs?"