Showing posts with label Jack Klugman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Klugman. Show all posts

12/24/2012

Jack Klugman (1922-2012)

Actor Jack Klugman, best known for his television performances on the beloved shows "The Odd Couple" and "Quincy"has passed away at the age of 90.  His television career - 3 Emmy wins - outshone his movie career, but he left a mark in film history with his memorable role as a juror in 12 Angry Men; he was the last surviving actor from the cast (I will be reviewing that film soon on this blog). I admired him for continuing to act after a 1989 throat cancer surgery affected his voice. As recently as this spring (March-April 2012), he appeared on stage in a production of 12 Angry Men in New Jersey.

Additionally, he was a veteran of WWII, serving in the US Army.  Rest in Peace, Jack.



Theatrical Filmography

1956 Time Table
1957 12 Angry Men
1958 Cry Terror
1962 Days of Wine and Roses
1963 I Could Go On Singing
1963 The Yellow Canary
1963 Act One
1965 Hail Mafia
1968 The Detective (with Frank Sinatra)
1968 The Split 
1969 Goodbye Columbus
1971 Who Says I Can't Ride A Rainbow
1976 Two Minute Warning
1996 Dear God

9/29/2009

Frank Sinatra in The Detective (1968)

I first watched this in 2005, curious to see Frank Sinatra play a detective in one of the very first R-rated movies (in the United States, "R" means - "Restricted to persons 18 years of age and over).

Frank plays a detective in this crime drama, but the tone of the movie feels like it's made for television. The French Connection had not yet come out.

Frank investigates a case where a homosexual is killed. He first inspects a room with a corpse...and takes notes of what he finds: "Male Caucasian. Lying nude on floor....Penis cut off...side of skull smashed in...cuts on face and chest...fingers shredded...semen stains on the sheets".  It's unusual to hear Frank Sinatra recite those lines.

In small roles are Jacqueline Bisset, Robert Duvall, Jack Klugman and Al Freeman Jr. ("Malcolm X").

There's some softer moments with his love interest, played by Lee Remick, but I wasn't convinced they were really interested in each other.

Duvall plays a tough cop who goes to a gay hangout to find a suspect, and then beats one of the suspects. Sinatra then calls him a miserable son-of-a-b-----.

There are strange moments like that throughout this film, which is otherwise unmemorable, and doesn't portray the gay community very positively. I was reminded of 1992 when there was alot of protest over similar crime films with gay suspects such as Basic Instinct and Silence of the Lambs.

This is probably a film that may be best enjoyed by fans of Frank Sinatra.

From 20th Century Fox films.