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Wednesday, March 19, 2008Book: Pictures At A Revolution, by Mark Harris (2008) 4 Comments:
I'd definitely agree with The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, though I much prefer Once Upon A Time in the West but that's not at stake here, as well as Point Blank a film that pistol whipped Mel Gibson's remake so bad it needed reconstructive surgery.
Also from that year there's Belle Du Jour and Blow Up. I only recently saw Belle and I was impressed by it even if the whole thing just seems some dirty old man's fantasy. Blow Up I saw a long time ago on BBC 2 and for a while I thought it was one of the coolest, in all sorts of meanings, things that I'd seen. Which sort of leads on to the one film that I haven't seen from that year and would really like to Le Samouraï. For what ever reason you can't get this on DVD in England but I've heard all sorts of good things about it, particularly how cool Delon's hat is.
A man of impeccable taste as always, Paul.
Blowup -- which I also think was cool -- was considered a 1966 movie, and received nominations for both direction and screenplay the previous year. According to Harris's book the movie's success baffled Katherine Hepburn. During publicity for Guess Who, she said, "We play tennis with the ball." They were mimes, Kate. Give 'em a break. I've seen Le Samourai. Delon's hat is truly awesome.
Definitely Le Samourai and I may have to do what I did with Point Blank and buy it from the US.
And I have a huge old soft spot for Cool Hand Luke, mostly because it's got that Southern sleaze touch that'll carry right through to some of my favourite movies of the seventies. In The Heat Of The Night - watched that again very recently and I was surprised at how well it held up, especially the performances, which are decidedly "less" than I remembered them, especially Steiger, who I may have mixed up with the fat sheriff from Live And Let Die. Hey, it happens.
There's a great line about Steiger in the book from Sidney Lumet, who directed him to an Oscar nod in 1965's The Pawnbroker. He quoted a friend of his on a New York newspaper columnist: "For a nickel, he gives you too much."
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