Showing posts with label Dustin Hoffman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dustin Hoffman. Show all posts

1/21/2020

Little Big Man (1970) and Midnight Cowboy (1969)

I've been wanting to see this movie forever, and finally did and really liked it! It reminded me of Dances with Wolves from 1990, primarily because it's about a white man raised by an indigenous tribe. Dustin Hoffman was an interesting choice to play this part. He was a big box office star from this time period, and he brings alot of that everyman essence to this part which I think is important for this role.

At the start of the film we meet Hoffman's character - a 120 year old man being interviewed by a reporter (William Hickey) interested in his long life and his supposed acquaintanceship with Civil War General Custer in the 1800s.

The old man lives in a nursing home; I have a relative who just moved into such a place, and they can be lonely places. I could understand why this old man would want to talk and tell his life story to someone who will listen. And he's had a long life, a really long life. He talks about being raised by a Cheyenne tribe, and later befriends historical figures Bill Hickock and General Custer. These sequences are episodic, but I really seeing him brush with historical figures. This was an idea that was used somewhat similarly later in the movie Forrest Gump, but I think works really good in this film.

I like how the old man narrates the movie throughout; this gave me the feeling that I was always being told the old man's story and not someone else's. He talks about the various "stages" of his life.... "My Indian Years", "My religious years", "My Outlaw Days", etc.  Faye Dunaway has a small supporting part where she plays a religious man's wife who becomes a prostitute later on.

I couldn't believe that it was Richard Mulligan playing a dramatic role as General Custer; I only knew him for his comedy roles on TV but he is really good in this.

There is also great standout performance by a Native American actor in the film - Chief Dan George. His part is significant as Hoffman's father figure and wise mentor who has some interesting (and racy) dialogue. I imagine that the audience of 1970 would like his line where he says, "Does she show enthusiasm when you mount her?" (referring to Hoffman's spouse).

It's unfortunate that the movie's marketing posters (as shown above) make this movie to look like a comedy, with Dustin Hoffman made to look like Don Knotts in The Shakiest Gun in the West. This is a really profound drama (with occasional comic relief), that was ahead of its time showing the perspectives of both indigenous and white peoples. Equally unfortunate is the lack of accolades that year - no Oscars...not even a Best Picture nomination. In 1970, the big winner was "Patton", which was a more traditional war film with a hero that audiences could probably relate to more. Little Big Man was unfortunately overshadowed by it, and I don't think audiences were quite ready to embrace such a film yet. Not until Dances with Wolves 20 years later.

I also re-watched Midnight Cowboy which I haven't seen in more than 20 years but remember liking it overall, especially the chemistry of the two leads (Voight and Hoffman). I forgot that there was a sequence where they go to a hippy artists' party in New York, and there are some real cameos by Andy Warhol protégés. After attending a Warhol art exhibit recently, I've been reading some of his biographies and a book of his journal entries; interestingly in one entry he wrote that he wanted to do a cameo in Midnight Cowboy but couldn't do it because he was in the hospital recovering from a gunshot wound (in the summer of '68).

I loved seeing all the on-location scenes of New York; I kept my eye peeled for any interesting posters that would have been of the times. I saw one poster/billboard with Jonathan Winters on it. And another poster was a movie ad for "Doctor Doolittle" starring Rex Harrison, which was interesting. Flash forward 50 years and we have yet another remake of "Doolittle" in theaters starring Robert Downey Jr (I'm planning to skip since it doesn't look all that appealing to me).

Another scene in Midnight Cowboy that I had forgotten about happens at the end where Joe Buck beats the old man in his hotel room, almost killing him (his actual death isn't shown but it's implied he might have killed him). This makes me feel less sympathetic toward the character, and even reminded me of what Brad Pitt does at the end of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (my least-favorite sequence in that movie); now I'm wondering if Tarantino intended that scene to be an homage to Midnight Cowboy.

5/25/2014

Chef (2014)

Chef is a new independent comedy-drama starring, written and directed by Jon Favreau, taking a break from directing blockbuster superhero movies with Robert Downey Jr (Downey Jr. has a cameo in this film, incidentally).

In a nutshell: a divorced LA chef quits his job in a restaurant and starts a food truck, all the while teaching his young son some lessons along the way. The kid also teaches his dad a thing or two.

Now, if you're think you'll like a movie with LOTS of cooking and eating, go see this movie. I was very glad I ate before the movie!

Favreau as the lead took me some getting used to. He's played an obnoxious guy  in everything I've seen him in (Swingers, Four Christmases) and he plays a similar character in this, hot tempered and all. But when he made that grilled cheese sandwich for his son, I was charmed.

I was surprised to see some big name stars in the cast. Dustin Hoffman plays the restaurant boss. Scar-Jo (Scarlett Johansson) is in it, too as the restaurant host.  The ex-wife is played by Sofia Veranga, who is good in her part. And I haven't seen John Leguizamo so good in a film since the mid '90s.

The father-son relationship is a big part of the movie. They have some some quality bonding time in a cross-country trek, as the truck makes stops in Miami, New Orleans, and Austin. The soundtrack is great, and moves the film along nicely.

Reflecting our modern day culture, there are many uses of social media in this movie, more than any film I've seen before. Many of the characters "Tweet", "text", "Facebook", and "YouTube", and even "Vine".  At one point Favreau says to his tech-savvy young son "You're the head of our Marketing team!"

All the Tweeting done in the film is integral to the story, and the way it is presented on screen is unique and clever, and will likely be imitated by others in the future.

This movie is getting good word of mouth, and is now among the "Top 10" hits in the United States this weekend.

9/24/2012

This Year's Honorary Oscars and Kennedy Center Honors

The recipients of this years's Honorary Oscars have been announced,

- Producer George Stevens, Jr.
- Stuntman Hal Needham
- Documentarian DA Pennenton

All deserving, I'd say, but as this article from Deadline Hollywood points out, no veteran actors were bestowed an honor this year. That means no Oscar for Glenn Close (6 nominations, 0 wins), Angela Lansbury (3 nominations, 0 wins) or Albert Finney (5 nominations, 0 wins).

Another living legend that fans would love to see honored is Doris Day (1 nomination, 0 wins), one of the most popular movie stars of the mid-'50s/early '60s. In poll after poll, her name is always at the top of of the list of "Most Deserving". But alas, the fans don't get the final call, the Academy's Board of Governors do, and if they really wanted to honor her, they would have done so 25 years ago.

The Humanitarian Award will be going to executive producer Jeffrey Katzenberg.


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The annual Kennedy Center performing arts honors were also announced, and this year's recipient representing the movies is actor Dustin Hoffman, star of some of the most acclaimed films of the last 45 years.

The other recipients are Buddy Guy, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, (music), David Letterman (television) and Natalia Makarova (ballet).

For whatever reason, Doris Day has never been voted to receive this honor either.

6/02/2011

Top 10 Box Office Stars of 1976 (USA)


The rankings come from Quigley Publishing Co.'s annual list (since 1932) of top money making stars in the USA, which based on a poll of hundreds of theater executives. The list does not rank stars only on how much cash their films made, but on what theater owners say about who attracts audiences on their star power alone.

Since this is the year I was born, this will be the last year that I'll post box office stars with photos.

1. Robert Redford

2. Jack Nicholson

3. Dustin Hoffman

4. Clint Eastwood

5. Mel Brooks

6. Burt Reynolds

7. Al Pacino

8. Tatum O'Neal

9. Woody Allen



10. Charles Bronson




3/07/2011

Marathon Man (1976)

This is a really thriller. Dustin Hoffman plays a pacifist grad student who eventually learns to use a gun to defend himself. He has a brother (Roy Scheider) who is a secret government agent surveilling a Nazi war criminal (Lawrence Olivier) who is after some diamonds he wants to cash in. Olivier is pure evil in this film. The scene where Holocaust survivors recognize him on the streets of New York is particularly chilling. The climax is a thrilling showdown between Hoffman and Olivier, two of the best film actors of all time. Co starring William Devane as another government agent.

1/30/2009

Who Is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me? (1971)

I thought this movie was OK. Dustin Hoffman plays a folk musician/songwriter.

He deludes into a depression, then completely breaks down, becoming reclusive, anti social, and un emotional. Then some eerie sequences of people floating through the air with close up and fades. All the while he's tormented by an unknown, unexplained man - the titular Kellerman - spreading lies about him.

Barbara Harris (who later went on to star in Freaky Friday and Nashville) is in a few scenes; she plays one of his lovers who wants nothing to do with him.