"Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast"
-Oscar Wilde
Brilliant at Breakfast title banner "The liberal soul shall be made fat, and he that watereth, shall be watered also himself."
-- Proverbs 11:25
"...you have a choice: be a fighting liberal or sit quietly. I know what I am, what are you?" -- Steve Gilliard, 1964 - 2007

"For straight up monster-stomping goodness, nothing makes smoke shoot out my ears like Brilliant@Breakfast" -- Tata

"...the best bleacher bum since Pete Axthelm" -- Randy K.

"I came here to chew bubblegum and kick ass. And I'm all out of bubblegum." -- "Rowdy" Roddy Piper (1954-2015), They Live
Tuesday, May 27, 2008

R.I.P. Sydney Pollack
Posted by Jill | 6:24 AM
I was watching Anne of the Thousand Days on Saturday -- a film based on a Maxwell Anderson play. As I do so often when watching movies from that period of the 1960's just before Bonnie and Clyde came along and changed American cinema, I was noting how stagy and actorish it seemed, even in a film like this that because of its subject matter has held up better than most films of the age. It really wasn't until the 1970's that characters in movies really started sounding like real people and actors weren't, as Jon Lovitz used to say, "AC-ting!" That's not to say that there were no good movies prior to 1970, but there is a marked difference in style between what came before and the immediacy that characterized the films of the late Vietnam era.

For all that Scorsese and Coppola are the 800-pound gorillas of 1970's cinema, you can't talk about that decade in movies without talking about Sydney Pollack, and few directors made the transition more seamlessly: Jeremiah Johnson. Three Days of the Condor. Bobby Deerfield. Out of Africa. Havana. The Firm. Not all of them great films, but in their own way characteristic of their time. But for my money, Pollack's best film was Tootsie. And my dirty little secret is that I always liked Pollack's work in FRONT of the camera better than his work behind it. This is one of my favorite scenes from Tootsie:



Labels:

Bookmark and Share
2 Comments:
Anonymous Anonymous said...
I was just thinking about this scene today when I read that Sydney Pollack had died. One of my favorite scenes too! Dustin Hoffman and Sydney Pollack were wonderful together.
Thanks for posting this.

Blogger Tonio Kruger said...
No, his best film was "Three Days of the Condor." But in wake of recent events, I could see why acknowledging that movie would depress you.

Yes, he will be missed.