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Re: Passages
Posted: Thu Nov 26, 2020 6:11 am
by GaryC
I can't see a proper online obituary just yet, but Sandy Harbutt, director of Stone, died on the 21st at age 79.
Re: Passages
Posted: Thu Nov 26, 2020 1:49 pm
by Lemmy Caution
A 10 min vid focusing on Maradona with the ball v. England in the 84 World Cup.
Besides the two goals, Maradona does a lot of next level ish all game. A lot of impressive wizardry, especially in the scoreless 1st half.
Re: Passages
Posted: Thu Nov 26, 2020 3:47 pm
by Calvin
Re: Passages
Posted: Thu Nov 26, 2020 7:34 pm
by colinr0380
That's very sad news. I'm afraid that I have not yet seen Elio Petri's Property Is No Longer A Theft, but she has amazing roles in Argento's Deep Red, where her character almost singlehandledly twists the film away from a giallo-horror into a kind of screwball romantic comedy whenever she appears, and as the tormented subject of a jealous, maybe supernaturally possessed, son in Mario Bava's final film
Shock. Plus the one 'innocent' figure in arguably Argento's best film, Tenebrae...
who seems to be so innocent of all of the double dealings, double lives, and alterior motives going on among all of the other characters that she is the only figure to be saved from death at the climax, albeit by unwittingly becoming a killer herself! Although we perhaps get the sense from her screams providing the counterpoint to the end credits that she may have ironically been left mentally broken and traumatised by the experience in a way that bookends the initial traumas that had created the killer(s) in the first place.
And of course she provided the inspiration for and co-wrote Suspiria and in doing so pushed the course of Dario Argento's career into some more fantastical directions. We just have to slightly overlook the way that Argento somehow found ever more brutal ways to offhandedly kill off her characters (albeit
in spectacular fashion!) in the films from Tenebrae onwards.
Re: Passages
Posted: Thu Nov 26, 2020 9:50 pm
by black&huge
From what I have understood over the years is that she is may be responsible for the bulk of writing Argento's scripts or at least the ideas/scenes when he had that string of 70's hits: Suspiria, Deep Red and Tenebrae of course going uncredited and letting Argento have most/all the credit. If anyone can shed light on this to confirm or deny that'd be great but that's been burned into my mind forever and this is tremendously shitty news in a long strong of all the people we lost this year.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sat Nov 28, 2020 4:43 am
by Feego
John Ericson passed away in May at age 93.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2020 7:44 am
by Aunt Peg
David Prowse: Darth Vader (and let's not forget A Clockwork Orange)
https://news.sky.com/story/david-prowse ... 5-12145735
Re: Passages
Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2020 8:42 am
by colinr0380
And for kids of my generation
the Green Cross Code man! (Once with
his own Bristolian accent!)
He did a lot of Hammer films too including playing Frankenstein's monster twice in
The Horror of Frankenstein (which is the rather unloved outlier in the Hammer series in having Ralph Bates playing Frankenstein rather than Peter Cushing) and then under all the makeup in
Frankenstein and the Monster From Hell. He's also a strongman in
Vampire Circus.
Also a lot of comedy, from appearing in Carry on Henry, to two of the three Frankie Howerd "Up..." films (Up Pompeii and Up The Chastity Belt), along with a
Benny Hill sketch! Plus in
Jabberwocky.
And he's in the 1978 BBC Shakespeare cycle production of As You Like It as the wrestler who is not above kicking an opponent in the crotch when they are down (with the audience wincing in pain in sympathy for the victim!) before the hero bests him.
Spark Notes Study Guides wrote:[The character of Charles is] a professional wrestler in Duke Frederick’s court. Charles demonstrates both his caring nature and his political savvy when he asks Oliver to intercede in his upcoming fight with Orlando: he does not want to injure the young man and thereby lose favor among the nobles who support him. Charles’s concern for Orlando proves unwarranted when Orlando beats him senseless.
Re: Passages
Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2020 10:13 am
by Aunt Peg
American born Australian actress Betty Bobbit best known from Prisoner (Cell Black H) as Judy Bryant:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_Bobbitt
Re: Passages
Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2020 7:43 pm
by Feego
And yet another death from several years ago I'm just discovering that went unmentioned here:
Kim McGuire, best remembered for playing Hatchet-Face in John Waters'
Cry-Baby.
Re: Passages
Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2020 2:48 pm
by CSM126
Pat Patterson, trailblazing pro wrestler who was a massive influence on Vince McMahon and WWE, and one of the earliest openly gay men in the industry.
Re: Passages
Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2020 7:09 pm
by MichaelB
Australian actor
Hugh Keays-Byrne, who didn't
only play the lead baddies in
Mad Max films, but they're what granted him immortality (or Immortanity).
Incidentally, it took me the better part of a decade to see his Toecutter in its full glory - until the original version popped up on BBC2 in the early 1990s, the only version of
Mad Max available in the UK was via Warner Bros' notorious American-dubbed atrocity (Christ knows why this was foisted on Britain; we've collectively never had a problem understanding Australian accents, and Londoners like me had even less difficulty, as Strine mutated from working-class London in the first place), and Keays-Byrne's performance suffered more than most, because his dubber made no attempt at replicating the deliberately wayward accent, to suggest a lifetime of nomadic drifting. Watched properly, his performance was absolutely transformed.
Re: Passages
Posted: Fri Dec 04, 2020 5:01 pm
by flyonthewall2983
CSM126 wrote: Wed Dec 02, 2020 2:48 pm
Pat Patterson, trailblazing pro wrestler who was a massive influence on Vince McMahon and WWE, and one of the earliest openly gay men in the industry.
To put a finer point on it, he was out to the people he worked with, not necessarily on camera (he would finally say that he was gay in 2014 on the WWE Network original series
Legends House). He wrestled from the 60's to the early 80's, and later appeared as one of Mr. McMahon's "stooges" in the late 90's. In between that time he was mostly off-camera and working behind the scenes as McMahon's right-hand guy in writing WWF tv and developing talent (he is largely credited with creating the Royal Rumble match).
Re: Passages
Posted: Fri Dec 04, 2020 7:11 pm
by Feego
Warren Berlinger, of
Blue Denim and
The Long Goodbye.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2020 2:58 am
by Dylan
A dignified hero
Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2020 8:34 am
by Lemmy Caution
Rafer Johnson, great athlete, humanitarian. Classy guy from a different era.
Amazing career.
Olympic decathlon gold medal.
A starter for John Wooden's UCLA hoops team.
Helped found Special Olympics.
Helped wrestle down Sirhan Sirhan.
Even made a few films:
After retiring form track, Rafer Johnson began acting in movies, including appearances in:
The Sins of Rachel Cade (1961), the Elvis Presley film Wild in the Country (1961), Pirates of Tortuga (1961), None but the Brave (1965), two Tarzan films with Mike Henry, The Last Grenade (1970), Soul Soldier (1970), Roots: The Next Generations (1979), the James Bond film Licence to Kill (1989), and Think Big (1990).
Per wiki, Kirk Douglas had Rafer lined up for a role in Spartacus but ridiculously that would have compromised his amateur status and Olympic career. Why you could work say bagging groceries but not a role in a film is hard to comprehend.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2020 10:44 am
by MichaelB
Czech critic
Antonín J. Liehm, who was one of the first people to recognise that something extraordinary was happening in Czechoslovak cinema from the early 1960s onwards, and went on to become the Czechoslovak New Wave's most comprehensive and sympathetic chronicler while it was still a going concern. (Peter Hames, his most important English-language equivalent, didn't start seriously researching it until the early 1970s.)
Re: Passages
Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2020 10:23 pm
by Feego
David Lander, Squiggy on
Laverne & Shirley
Re: Passages
Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2020 10:32 pm
by soundchaser
Oh jeez. Lenny and Squiggy were iconic. I had no idea Lander was that old, but apparently so is Michael McKean.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sat Dec 05, 2020 11:47 pm
by hearthesilence
soundchaser wrote: Sat Dec 05, 2020 10:32 pm
Oh jeez. Lenny and Squiggy were iconic. I had no idea Lander was that old, but apparently so is Michael McKean.
McKean actually got hit by a car eight years ago a few blocks from where I was working. It was a close one, I think he said afterwards he was very lucky.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2020 1:04 am
by domino harvey
McKean definitely looked pretty old on the Good Place, he’s getting up there
Re: Passages
Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2020 2:23 pm
by Feego
The main cast of Laverne & Shirley were in their 30s for most of the show’s run, so yep, after 40+ years they’re almost all in their 70s. Karmine was the youngest and I believe is still in his 60s.
Re: Passages
Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2020 6:26 pm
by senseabove
Aunt Peg wrote: Sun Nov 15, 2020 8:50 am
Soumitra Chatterjee who played Apu in The World of Apu:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soumitra_Chatterjee
(This year is reminding me of the dark days of the 1980s/1990s) The number of people within the entertainment industry alone passing away due to COVID is staggering.
Criterion published
a great belated obit piece on Chatterjee and his importance in Bengali cinema this week.
Re: Passages
Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2020 8:12 am
by colinr0380
Not having seen Laverne & Shirley I am afraid that I have only been familiar with Squiggy from his
Simpsons guest star spot!
Re: Passages
Posted: Mon Dec 07, 2020 3:24 pm
by Feego
In truth,
Laverne & Shirley was not that brilliant of a show, but it boasted some great comic talent, particularly from McKean and Lander. They created the Lenny and Squiggy characters in college and truly got to run with them on the show. They developed the tongue-in-cheek music act
Lenny and the Squigtones that they even performed outside the series, including on
American Bandstand. And of course, their trademark bit on the show was making
a perfectly timed entrance after a verbal setup with Squiggy's nonchalant "Hello."