Wednesday, December 13, 2006

PETER BOYLE, 71

Lazlo is dead. MIT gets the point.

Peter Boyle. Crap.

5 comments:

tractorgurl said...

Holy Crap! I hear you, Where The Buffalo Roam (1980). I'm going to miss him, he had a project in pre-production and one he just wrapped. A very good talent lost. I read John Lennon was a very good friend of his, best man at his wedding... Imagine that.

Anonymous said...

True, "Where the Buffalo Roam" is wonderful. And I really liked Boyle (and everyone and most everything else) about "The Candidate." But if you want to see the guy at his best, see "Joe." Brilliantly depressing...

Anonymous said...

A real pro when the going got weird.

Anonymous said...

I heard he had an enormous schmongstooker.

Which did he do first the shooting instructor in "Medium Cool" or the ad guy in the Thom McCann commercial who pitched the idea for loafers singing "Shoe-Boom-Shoe Boom."
Jeff Boggs
KTXR-KWTO-KBFL

Busplunge said...

Medium Cool---
Medium Cool
1969-USA-Political Drama/Social Problem Film
N.Y. Times Review by Vincent Canby

PLOT DESCRIPTION
"I love to shoot film" is the sanguine motto of TV lensman John Cassellis (Robert Forster) in Haskell Wexler's 1969 Medium Cool, a semi-documentary investigation of image-making and politics. With his soundman, Gus (Peter Bonerz), John films such events as gruesome car wrecks with frosty detachment, considering himself a mere recorder of circumstances, his only responsibility to get his film in on time. Even his girlfriend, Ruth (Marianna Hill), cannot understand or penetrate John's complacency. Encounters with signs of the late '60s times, however, raise John's consciousness about the implications of his job, as he films a verbal attack by black militants on the media's racism, gets fired after he objects to having that footage turned over to the FBI, and meets Vietnam War widow Eileen (Verna Bloom). John witnesses the violence of the state firsthand as he and Eileen search for her son amidst the real-life demonstrations and riots at the 1968 Chicago Democratic Convention. Even though he realizes the political power of pointing a camera at anything, John finally cannot extricate himself or his loved ones from a culture obsessed with recording any sensational, gory incident. Scripted (from a novel by Jack Couffer), directed, and shot by Oscar-winning cinematographer and political activist Wexler, Medium Cool systematically questions the ideological power of images by combining documentary techniques such as "talking heads" and cinéma vérité with staged scenes between the actors. By the time Wexler and his crew start filming Forster and Bloom among the actual events at the convention, all barriers between fiction and fact are broken down, as Wexler's assistant can be heard warning, "Watch out, Haskell, it's real," when tear gas is thrown. The footage of cops clubbing people in the crowd is real, but Wexler's presence also turns it into part of a fictional story, revealing filmed "reality" to be as artificially constructed as any other fiction, subject to the interpretation of whoever holds the camera and, perhaps, to larger institutions of power.

Funding Medium Cool partly out of his own resources, Wexler had free reign during production, but when the execs at Paramount saw the result, they were not pleased. Despite the timely subject matter, Paramount delayed and then curtailed the film's release, tempering its impact on critics and audiences. Regardless of that record, Medium Cool stands as a vital late-'60s film for its incisive narrative and formal dissection of the visual politics of "truth," and its awareness of how coolly seductive televised violence might be as entertainment, especially in a historical moment marked by incendiary images of political assassinations, the Vietnam War, the civil rights movement, and counterculture protests. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

What a great movie!