tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329706.post9438761503432662..comments2024-03-21T12:51:21.667-04:00Comments on Whisky Prajer: Tom Carson on Lee Marvindpreimerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09905531259256800022noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329706.post-28898941344559932732010-10-22T15:51:45.824-04:002010-10-22T15:51:45.824-04:00WP,
That's some heady goal. Mine was simply to...<b>WP</b>,<br />That's some heady goal. Mine was simply to see if my ten monkey digits could clang together a posted sentence or two.DarkoVhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11572734667248592785noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329706.post-55268668848294598732010-10-21T10:44:11.779-04:002010-10-21T10:44:11.779-04:00Deconstructing Point Blank was one of my foremost ...Deconstructing <i>Point Blank</i> was one of my foremost priorities when I started this blog, actually. Guess it's time I got to it.Whisky Prajerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14076228013022881173noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329706.post-84387457723160606202010-10-21T10:40:35.679-04:002010-10-21T10:40:35.679-04:00Marvin is one of the few actors to ever cross over...<i>Marvin is one of the few actors to ever cross over from playing the sullen heavy (his 50's meal ticket) to playing the hero, and what makes the shift from villain to protagonist telling is that, from Bogart to Ahn-old, it always means the audience's demands have changed. So far as Marvin goes, you get one guess which shift in America's tectonic plates was responsible for our need to think of this happy ogre as one of the good guys. When Lyndon Johnson's Great Society went up the waterspout in Vietnam, Jack Lemmon became a tragedian. Marvin turned into screen violence's greatest joker.<br /><br />In terms of what he brought to the party, which was a kind of obscene knoledgeability, it's not irrelevant that he probably saw more World War II combat than any other star. John Wayne, of course, famously never served at all. Ronald Reagan fought the Battle of Culver City, and Jimmy Stewart, to his vast credit, flew B-17 missions over Europe. But they were all famous </i>before<i> Pearl Harbor. Marvin fought the war as a grunt.<br /><br />... he knew World War II had to be fought; everyone did. But he also knew that winning it had let loose a new kind of psychosis in American life, and audiences needed his baleful, antic face to let us somehow rationalize that without admitting it. If the war damaged him, no wonder; it damaged everybody. The reason he's disturbing and indelible is that the damage was the making of him.</i><br /><br />Most of Tom Carson's work as a columnist is very of-the-moment (as it should be), but this one is a keeper. It's quite a shame it's not available on-line, or in a <a href="http://www.amazon.com/New-Biographical-Dictionary-Film-Completely/dp/0307271749/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1287671467&sr=8-1" rel="nofollow">David</a> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Have-You-Seen-Personal-Introduction/dp/0307264610/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1287671467&sr=8-2" rel="nofollow">Thomson</a> sort of publication, because it's definitely a keeper.Whisky Prajerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14076228013022881173noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329706.post-56514375715747008662010-10-21T08:34:49.086-04:002010-10-21T08:34:49.086-04:00IMHO, Lee Marvin is the most American of all actor...IMHO, Lee Marvin is the most American of all actors. Even more so than John Wayne.<br /><br />...and I get this opinion strictly from seeing some of Lee Marvin's movies with the natives in other countries.<br /><br />Do you ever notice how he handles guns? He tends to bounce them from hand to hand or simply juggle them, like hot marbles. It's as if he knows that if he simply lets them settle motionless in one hand, someone's going to get shot. Dead.<br />Have you ever seen <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062138/" rel="nofollow">Point Blank</a>, an oldie from 1967? I'd recommend it highly.DarkoVhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11572734667248592785noreply@blogger.com