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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 9:21 pm
by colinr0380
Terrible news. I've just read on the DVD Maniacs site that Bob Clark, the director of A Christmas Story, Porky's and the original Black Christmas was killed in a car crash.
Article here.
DVD Verdict did an interview with him in December (Episode 21).
Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2007 3:53 am
by tavernier
LAPD investigators said Clark was driving a 1997 Infiniti Q-30 sedan southbound on PCH when the driver of a GMC Yukon, Hector Velazquez-Nava, 24, of Los Angeles swerved and hit the Clark vehicle head-on.
The road was closed until about 10:40 a.m. while authorities investigated.
Nava and his passenger, Lydia Mora, 29, of Asuza, were transported to a local hospital, where they were treated for minor injuries, said LAPD Lt. Paul Vernon. Mora was later released.
Nava was found to be driving under the influence of alcohol and operating a motor vehicle without a driver's license. After treatment, he will be booked on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol and gross vehicular manslaughter, Vernon said.
It's fucking amazing that the drunk and his passenger only have "minor injuries." Has there ever been a drunk driving accident where the drunk was killed and the people in the car that was hit only got "minor injuries"? Fuck.
Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2007 6:18 am
by skuhn8
It was a Yukon. Impossible to manouvre: but your victim pays the price. There should be extra punishment for gross negligence on the part of oversized SUV drivers since they're cruising around in overpowered tanks.
Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2007 10:01 am
by PhilipS
Calvin Lockhart and
George Sewell.
Calvin Lockhart, star of stage and screen whose character name of Biggie Smalls in the 1975 film “Let's Do It Againâ€
Posted: Mon Apr 09, 2007 5:03 pm
by Fletch F. Fletch
From GreenCine Daily, April 7, 2007:
John Flynn, director Rolling Thunder (1977) and The Outfit (1973), among others, passed away in his sleep on Wednesday. Both films got great responses at last year's Best of QT Fest (notes here and here). I don't like writing obits, so I'll just say that if you haven't seen these two movies (both of which really need to be released on DVD), I'd highly recommend checking them out.
Posted: Mon Apr 09, 2007 5:31 pm
by Matt
The Grim Reaper was busy this weekend. Also dead, Johnny Hart (
killed by his own shitty
comic strip) and Sol LeWitt (great conceptual/minimalist artist).
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 1:35 am
by PhilipS
Actor Roscoe Lee Browne dies at 81 in Los Angeles
Actor Roscoe Lee Browne, whose rich voice and dignified bearing brought him an Emmy Award and a Tony nomination, has died. He was 81.
Browne died early Wednesday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles following a long battle with cancer, said Alan Nierob, a spokesman for the family.
Browne had a decades-long career that ranged from classic theater to TV cartoons. He also was a poet and a former world-class athlete.
His deep, cultured voice was heard narrating the 1995 hit movie "Babe." On screen, his character often was smart, cynical and well-educated, whether a congressman, a judge or a butler.
Born May 2, 1925, to a Baptist minister in Woodbury, New Jersey, Browne graduated from historically black Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, where he later returned to teach comparative literature and French.
He also was a track star, winning a 1951 world championship in the 800-yard (731-meters) dash.
He was selling wine for an import company when he decided to become a full-time actor in 1956 and had roles that year in the inaugural season of the New York Shakespeare Festival in a production of "Julius Caesar."
In 1961, he starred in an English-language version of Jean Genet's play "The Blacks." Two years later, he was The Narrator in a Broadway production of "The Ballad of the Sad Cafe," a play by Edward Albee from a novella by Carson McCullers. In a front page article on the advances made by blacks in the theater, the New York Times noted that Browne's understudy was white.
He won an Obie Award in 1965 for his role as a rebellious slave in the off-Broadway "Benito Cereno."
In movies, he was a spy in the 1969 Alfred Hitchcock feature "Topaz" and a camp cook in 1972's "The Cowboys," which starred John Wayne.
"Some critics complained that I spoke too well to be believable" in the cook's role, Browne told The Washington Post in 1972. "When a critic makes that remark, I think, if I had said, 'Yassuh, boss' to John Wayne, then the critic would have taken a shine to me."
He also said he liked Wayne, "a genuine wit, capable of a splendid bon mot," despite having little use for his conservative politics.
On television, he had several memorable guest roles. He was a snobbish black lawyer trapped in an elevator with bigot Archie Bunker in an episode of the 1970s TV comedy "All in the Family" and the butler Saunders in the comedy "Soap." He won an Emmy in 1986 for a guest role as Professor Foster on "The Cosby Show."
In 1992, Browne returned to Broadway in "Two Trains Running," one of August Wilson's acclaimed series of plays on the black experience. It won the Tony for best play and brought Browne a Tony nomination for best featured (supporting) actor.
Browne "brings an infectious good humor to the role of Holloway, the resident philosopher who dispenses most of Wilson's common sense,"
wrote Michael Kuchwara, The Associated Press drama critic.
The New York Times said he portrayed "the wry perspective of one who believes that human folly knows few bounds and certainly no racial bounds. The performance is wise and slyly life-affirming."
Browne also wrote poetry and included some of it along with works by masters such as Lawrence Ferlinghetti and William Butler Yeats in "Behind the Broken Words," a poetry anthology stage piece that he and Anthony Zerbe performed annually for three decades.
Filmography
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 4:48 am
by HerrSchreck
Kurt Vonnegut has died.
From NYTimes:
[quote]Kurt Vonnegut, whose dark comic talent and urgent moral vision in novels like “Slaughterhouse-Five,â€
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 5:04 am
by souvenir
That's a hit I haven't felt since Altman, I think. I saw him on the Daily Show just a few months ago, I believe, and he seemed appropriately elderly, but I'm surprised he's left us already.
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 5:23 am
by HerrSchreck
So it goes. He sure will be missed.
So it goes.
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 7:11 am
by miless
Timequake is one of my favorite books of all time (the premise would make an interesting, yet incredibly difficult to pull off, film scheme)...
Vonnegut's death hit me hard (it's actually kind of weird as I was just talking about him this weekend... and I was just talking about Sol LeWitt (who died a few days ago, as well) when viewing a piece of his... maybe I should just stop talking about people)
A great man... maybe I'll watch My Life As A Dog to mourn.
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 3:06 pm
by Scharphedin2
"So it goes" is right... I love Vonnegut's books too, but at least he had a very full life, and wrote some of the most memorable books of the last fifty years.
Davidhare's announcement, on the other hand, completely made my day. I must have told at least fifty people about this at work today, and at lunch we brought out a toast with diet coke.
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 5:32 pm
by mikeohhh
whoa, Nick Lowe's "So It Goes" just came on my iPod right while I was reading that Vonnegut obit.
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2007 11:48 pm
by Astroman
He was, is, my favorite writer. His work, especially Slaughterhouse-Five and Breakfast of Champions, taught me more about life, humanity, than any high school or college class I've attended. I've read damn near everything he's published, and have re-read several of those.
I had the opportunity to meet Kurt Vonnegut twice, most recently about three years ago. The day after I got married, my wife and I attended a lecture of his, and we went to an after-speech event where he was guest of honor. I chatted with him for a few minutes, and then introduced my wife to him - "We just got married yesterday." He actually beamed as he shook my wife's hand. We told him how we scheduled our wedding and departure for our honeymoon around his visit to town, and he really did seem touched. "Well, you're a very attractive couple," he said to us.
It was later that evening, on our way home, that I realized that the first person I ever introduced my wife to as my wife was to Kurt Vonnegut.
His passing is incredibly sad to me, affecting me on a more personal level than if he'd simply been my favorite author.
By the way, the film version of Slaughterhouse-Five is actually pretty good.
Posted: Sat Apr 14, 2007 9:49 am
by Caligula
Barry Nelson, first actor to play 007,
has died.
Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 4:45 am
by HerrSchreck
Vonnegut truly did have a very full life and career, but it doesn't cushion the blow much.
He seemed to me the epitome of humor, crystalizing it's function in human life: survival mechanism. His openness about his inner-sadness, his struggles to stay alive versus his own self-destructive impulses (and the paradigm laid down for him via his mother's suicide), his complete lack of showiness and celebrity ego (and of course his rare literary talent) made his humor just archtypical as an example of Pure Humor In It's Best Form.
The self referential novels like BREAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS (those drawings!) were so incredibly hilarious yet had such a naked undercurrent of desperate autobiographical sadness, it just seemed to be the encyclopedic definition of humor viz it's survival function.
He was wrong about one thing. There's a scene in BREAKFAST where he's (Vonnegut) sitting, I believe, in his car prior to his rendezvous outside the narrative with his character Kilgor Trout. He's smoking Pall Malls, which he says "would kill me by and by." Thank god he didn't die a long agonizing death by lung cancer.
Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 3:57 pm
by colinr0380
HerrSchreck wrote:Thank god he didn't die a long agonizing death by lung cancer.
BBC report from early 2006: "I'm suing a cigarette company because on the package they promised to kill me, and yet here I am," he joked.
A
tribute from writers
Posted: Mon Apr 16, 2007 5:08 pm
by Fletch F. Fletch
[quote]Sunday, April 15, 2007
JAMES LYONS
Jim Lyons died on Thursday in New York.
If you didn't know Jim personally and just recognize his name from movie credits, then you most probably remember him as an editor. His credits include four films by Todd Haynes – Poison, Safe, Velvet Goldmine and Far from Heaven – as well as Spring Forward, The Virgin Suicides, Silver Lake Life, and, most recently, A Walk into the Sea: The Danny Williams Story. The latter, a documentary by Esther Robinson about her uncle's relationship with Andy Warhol and The Factory, won the Teddy at Berlin this year and receives its U.S. premiere at Tribeca this month. He was also an AIDS activist and educator.
But Jim did many other things – he wrote, acted and had plans to direct – and his great contribution to our world of film lay in his contributions not to any one of these fields but rather across them. Jim was an artist, even when he was editing someone else's material, and he brought an artist's sensibility, temperament and questioning to everything he did. Whether it was playing the artist David Wojnarowicz in Steve McLean's Postcards from America or Billy Name in Mary Harron's I Shot Andy Warhol, or co-writing the story for Velvet Goldmine, Jim's work questioned the social codes and roles that act to define us while also finding the elements of beauty in the spaces in between.
A few years ago Filmmaker ran a piece in which we asked people to tell us what was inspiring them in their work. Jim's response, excerpted below, is a good illustration of the range and passion of his interests:
"Punk rock and Michel Foucault. I'm writing a script about Foucault's life and how it intersected with the San Francisco underground sex and music scenes of the early ‘80s while he was teaching at Berkeley. Foucault insisted that philosophical ideas had real-life consequences, something I rarely see addressed in independent movies. He wrote about power and how its best trick was to make itself seem normal and inevitable. He believed that new pleasures and identities and ways of living were always possible because freedom was there for the taking. Unfortunately, they came together during Reagan's ‘80s, which was the beginning of the national nightmare we are living today."
I worked with Jim twice – he cut two films Robin O'Hara and I produced, First Love, Last Rites, and The Chateau, both directed by Jesse Peretz. Before I hired him on the first one, I called another producer who had worked with him. He told me not to expect a facile technician who would whip out 20 different versions of a scene on the Avid in an afternoon. “What you have to understand about working with Jim,â€
Posted: Mon Apr 16, 2007 9:39 pm
by Matt
What that long tribute quite obviously dances around and still manages to leave out is that he died from squamous cell cancer or, more succinctly, AIDS.
Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2007 7:44 am
by HerrSchreck
Surprised. The NYTImes hardcopy obit today mentioned it, so it's no secret.
PS: What, no love for
Don Ho?
Posted: Wed Apr 18, 2007 7:39 pm
by Barmy
Kitty Carlisle Hart R.I.P., dead at 157.
Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2007 11:48 am
by PhilipS
Jean-Pierre Cassel
is dead at 74.
Filmography, which includes work with Renoir, Bunuel, Gance, Clair and Melville.
Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2007 3:44 pm
by miless
PhilipS wrote:Jean-Pierre Cassel
is dead at 74.
Filmography, which includes work with Renoir, Bunuel, Gance, Clair and Melville.
and, of course, is the father of Vincent Cassel... star of La Haine.
Posted: Thu Apr 26, 2007 10:57 pm
by Barmy
Jack Valenti, censor, is dead.
Posted: Fri Apr 27, 2007 12:15 am
by PhilipS
Barmy wrote:Jack Valenti, censor, is dead.
I note you haven't infringed the rights of the copyright owner by pasting a news item. He would be pleased.