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Insignificance DVD

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Brains and beauty meet in one wildly explosive night. When Marilyn Monroe and Albert Einstein meet one sweltering night in New York City in 1953 the result is an evening of mistaken identities and marital misgivings. Gary Busey Theresa Russell and Tony Curtis star in this turbulent comedy of secrets and lies from which no one emerges unscathed.

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Released
07 May 2007
Directors
Actors
Format
DVD 
Publisher
Network 
Classification
Runtime
104 minutes 
Features
PAL 
Barcode
5027626263348 
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Nicholas Roeg's widely acclaimed drama set in the '50s and featuring fictional likenesses of four of the decade's most recognisable icons. The film is largely a theoretical conversation between Marilyn Monroe, Albert Einstein, Joe McCarthy and Joe DiMaggio, though no names are ever mentioned. A busty blonde actress played by Theresa Russell is working on a film in which one shot involves her standing over a blowing fan grate. In her hotel she meets a seemingly bumbling, tousle-headed Harvard professor (Michael Emil) and the two engage in a conversation in which she explains the theory of relativity. Her husband, a pro ball player (Gary Busey) is madly in love with her but jealous to the point of madness. A barking mad, drunken, paranoid, zealous Wisconsin senator, played by Tony Curtis, is in the professor's room to impeach him on charges of un-American activities. Along the way, fascinating conversations develop between the characters.