Tuesday, August 12, 2014

The Essential Robin Williams

Robin Williams
1951 - 2014

On August 11, 2014, Robin Williams, an Academy Award winning actor, accomplished stand-up comedian and cultural icon, died due to an apparent suicide attempt. He was 63 years old.  Williams was a rising stand-up comedian before rocketing to fame on the sitcom "Mork & Mindy" in 1978.  His film career took off shortly afterwards, beginning in films like Popeye, The World According to Garp, finding critical acclaim in Good Morning, America and Dead Poets Society and reaching a new audience in children with films like Aladdin and the Night at the Museum series. In 1998, he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for Good Will Hunting.  In this article, I'd like to pay tribute to his great career and listing his essential performances.  

R.I.P.

GOOD WILL HUNTING
Gus Van Sant
1997

Probably the highlight of Williams' career as it earned him an Academy Award win for Best Supporting Actor. Williams played Sean Maguire, a therapist assigned to help Matt Damon's titular Will Hunting's life. Williams tragi-comic performance is especially poignant when considering the circumstances of his death.


ALADDIN
John Musker, Ron Clements
1992

From a box office standpoint, Aladdin certainly qualifies as Williams' most successful of all time.  Aladdin was not only a highly profitable and entertaining film, but changed the industry of voice acting forever. Not only did Robin Williams create a lasting character in the genie, but after his performance, most major animated studio films recruited top names as voice talent. No one has ever reached the heights of this performance however.

DEAD POETS SOCIETY
Peter Weir
1989

Admission time. I don't particularly like this film. In fact, I intensely dislike it. However, no list of Essential Robin Williams performances can be complete without it. The film, which features Williams as an English teacher at a stuffy preparatory school that inspires his students through poetry. The film earned Williams an Academy Award nomination. Social media lit up with "O Captain, My Captain" upon the news of Williams' death. While I don't like the film, I can appreciate that an entire generation was inspired by this film and his performance.

THE FISHER KING
Terry Gilliam
1991

In another tragic/comedic performance, Robin Williams plays Parry, a deluded homeless man that's dedicated to finding the holy grail.  He's befriended by Jeff Bridges, who plays a shock-jock radio host racked by guilt because his words inadvertently inspired the suicidal gunman who killed Parry's wife.  Williams plays Parry as completely unhinged, and was given plenty of opportunity to chew the scenery. But in the quiet moments of his depression is when we feel for the character most.

AWAKENINGS
Penny Marshall
1990

Playing against type, Robin Williams is Dr. Malcolm Sayer, a doctor assigned to a mental ward of catatonic patients. Trying anything to break them out of their state, he gets permission to try a chemical cure on one of his patients, played by Robert DeNiro. The treatment works, if only temporarily, as Williams and Deniro form a close bond throughout the film while Williams' character tries to find a more permanent cure for his patients.

GOOD MORNING VIETNAM
Barry Levinson
1987

Robin Williams plays Adrian Cronauer, a comedian sent to Vietnam to try and entertain the troops and lift morale through his morning radio show, which always opens with his signature "Gooood morning Vietnam!" greeting.  Cronauer succeeds in lifting the spirits of the troops, at the expense of lampooning the war, much to his superior's chagrin. He meets and falls in love with a local Vietnamese girl, who shows him the horrors of the American military campaign in Vietnam.

THE BIRDCAGE
Mike Nichols
1996

A film ahead of its time in acceptance of LGBT marriage equality, Robin Williams plays Armand, a gay nightclub owner married to his long-time partner Albert (Natan Lane.)  When his son, Val, shows up with news that he's getting married to the daughter of a right-wing conservative congressman, Armand must upend his whole life to try and prove to the congressman that they are an all-American "normal" family.  Albert throws a wrench in the plans by showing up in drag in attempt to fool the girl's parent into thinking he's Val's biological mother.  The farce is a remake of the French film La cage aux folles, and Williams and Lane's comedic chemistry make it a modern comedy classic.

INSOMNIA
Christopher Nolan
2002

In Christopher Nolan's remake of the 1997 Norwegian thriller, Williams plays Walter Finch, a crime fiction author living in Alaska under investigation by Al Pacino's Will Dormer.  The film plays with the "midnight sun" months in the northern part of the globe, causing Dormer endless insomnia (or is it his conscience that's actually causing it?)  Williams plays against type in this psychological drama.

MRS. DOUBTFIRE
Chris Columbus
1993

A role tailor-made for Robin Williams, and one of his most famous roles. Williams plays Danielle Hillard, a divorced dad that would do anything to regain custody of his children. Anything including dressing up as an English nanny so he can visit his children right under the nose of his unsuspecting ex-wife.  Williams' wide range of bombastic tendencies were a perfect for this broad comedy... and it remains a much-beloved American film.

WHAT DREAMS MAY COME
Vincent Ward
1998

The saddest film on the list, in terms of subject matter, in light of the details surrounding Williams' death.  Williams plays the recently deceased Chris Nielsen, who is getting used to his new home in his personalized Heaven. However when he finds out that his clinically depressed wife committed suicide, he literally journeys to Hell to save her soul.  

OTHER NOTABLE PERFORMANCES:
Hamlet (1996)
Deconstructing Harry (1997)
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988)
The World According to Garp (1982)
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)
One Hour Photo (2002)
Moscow on the Hudson (1984)
Jumanji (1995)
Hook (1991)
Death to Smoochy (2002)


Sunday, July 13, 2014

FORCED PERSPECTIVE, Ep.46 – The Spider-Man Chronicles, Part 3



What do you get when you mix jive dancing, excessive crying, dumb scientists, Star Wars prequel bashing, and some TOE-BEE? Why, you get FORCED PERSPECTIVE, EPISODE 46 of course!

Join SportsGuy515 and Adolfo, along with special guest co-hosts BIG D and HAMZA, as they take an in-depth look at the obvious black sheep of the Sam Raimi SPIDER-MAN trilogy, Spider-Man 3. PLUS – which dancing scene was worse (sidewalk or jazz club), is dancing jive while wearing the BLACK SUIT considered racist, Peter Jackson making shit up, MILKTOAST Peter Parker (as HAMZA calls him), the greatness of THOMAS HADEN CHURCH and the butchering of the VENOM character, a rant by BIG D on the emasculation of America and how it’s ruined Dragon Ball Z, a HEADCASE story, and MORE! ALMOST 3 HOURS OF SPIDEY TALK!! DOWNLOAD/STREAM NOW!!!

Sunday, July 6, 2014

The Essential Films Podcast - Episode 1 - Casablanca



Please listen to our very first episode of the brand new Essential Films podcast!  The show has been submitted to iTunes, so please subscribe!


Wednesday, June 25, 2014

RIP Eli Wallach 1915-2014


ELI WALLACH
1915 - 2014

We at The Essential Films are saddened to hear about the passing of legendary actor Eli Wallach.  Wallach has best been known for his works as a screen villain, but his filmography is quite extensive from early television work, to the westerns he's known for, to the campy 60s "Batman" TV show and even starring in romantic comedies like The Holiday and New York, I Love You.  Here are our favorite Eli Wallach roles:

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960)
Wallach plays Calvera, the evil bandit that frequently raids a small Mexican village.  In a plot heavily borrowed from Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, the villagers hire seven gunslingers to rid their village of Calvera for good.

HOW THE WEST WAS WON (1962)
As Charlie Gant, Wallach is an outlaw who's looking for revenge against Karl Maden's marshall Zeb Prescott for killing his brother in a gunfight.  Wallach, again the heavy, makes threats against Zeb and his family, so Zeb decides to be proactive.  He ambushes Gant during a robbery ending in a climactic big screen shootout.

THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966)
Perhaps Wallach's most famous role.  Wallach is Tuco (or "The Ugly" of the three main characters), an oafish outlaw that sometimes teams with Clint Eastwood's "Blondie" (aka "The Good") in con jobs for reward money.  After the two un-amicably split, Tuco discovers the location of a cemetery where a treasure is buried. However Blondie knows the name of the actual grave where its buried, so the two uneasily team up once again to reach their gold.  Hot on their trail is "Angel Eyes" (or the titular "Bad"), a mercenary who always finishes the job he's paid for.

THE GODFATHER PART III (1990)
In the controversial third part of the Godfather trilogy, Wallach plays Don Altobello, an aging New York crime boss with connections to the Corleone family.  Altobello pushes Michael to go forward on a deal with an Italian corporation, but does he have other motives in mind? A small role in a movie with many problems, but Wallach delivers as always.

Other Notable Films:

BABY DOLL (1956)
THE LINEUP (1958)
THE MISFITS (1961)
HOW TO STEAL A MILLION (1966)
EYE OF THE CAT (1975)
THE EXECUTIONER'S SONG (1982)
MYSTIC RIVER (2003)
THE HOLIDAY (2006)
THE GHOST WRITER (2010)
WALL STREET: MONEY NEVER SLEEPS (2010)

Friday, June 13, 2014

FORCED PERSPECTIVE, Ep.45 – The Spider-Man Chronicles, Part 2



On this episode of FORCED PERSPECTIVE, the Spider-Man film chronology continues! Join SportsGuy515 and Adolfo, along with special guest co-hosts BIG D and BRANDON DRAVEN (making his FP debut) as they have the most in-depth Spider-Man 2 discussion you will ever hear. Plus – Draven’s favorite movie, Big D rants on “TOE-BEE,” the greatness of Alfred (“Freddie”) Molina and J.K. Simmons (yet again), M. Night Shyamalan, the idenity of “P. Nguin,” can poetry alone help guys get girls, and MORE! OVER 2 HOURS OF SPIDEY TALK!! DOWNLOAD/STREAM NOW!!!

Monday, May 26, 2014

FORCED PERSPECTIVE, Ep.44 – The Spider-Man Chronicles, Part 1



Your favorite movie podcast returns with yet another installment of their critically-acclaimed retrospective series! Join SportsGuy515 and Adolfo, along with special guests BIG D and MR. EDDIE, as they begin the first of four episodes chronicling the cinematic history of SPIDER-MAN, beginning with an in-depth discussion of his comic book origins and followed by the 2002 film. Plus, did Hulk Hogan say “shit” or “dookie,” the most pornographic name for a comic book EVER, why Hollywood should stop setting films in high school, Tobey the Emo, getting a $3000 payday on the indie wrestling scene, the awesomeness of Willem Dafoe and J.K. Simmons, and MORE! OVER 2 HOURS OF SPIDEY TALK!! DOWNLOAD/STREAM NOW!!!

Friday, May 2, 2014

FORCED PERSPECTIVE, Ep.43 – Under the Captain’s Skin in Budapest



FORCED PERSPECTIVE is BACK with an ALL-NEW EPISODE! Join SportsGuy515 & Adolfo as they put a knot on 2013 with a recap of the 86th Academy Awards and mini-reviews of American Hustle and The Wolf of Wall Street. Then, the duo will run headfirst into 2014 with reviews of The Grand Budapest Hotel, Muppets Most Wanted, Divergent, Under the Skin, Oculus and Captain America: The Winter Soldier. PLUS – thoughts on WWE Films, the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, SPORTSGUY’S FIRST SHORT FILM, 21-1, Ultimate Warrior, and MORE!! DOWNLOAD/STREAM NOW!!!

Monday, March 3, 2014

The 2014 Essential Film Awards

Celebrating the cinematic achievements of 2013

Official 2013 Selections

 

 



 

 



Best Film of the Year


GRAVITY
Alfonso Cuarón
91 Min. • 2.35:1 • United States
Color • English • Warner Bros.
Cast: Sandra Bullock, George Clooney
Writers: Alfonso & Jonás Cuarón
Producers: Alfonso Cuarón, David Heyman
Cinematography: Emmanuel Lubezki



Best Actor in a Lead Role



12 YEARS A SLAVE
Chiwetel Ejiofor



Best Actress in a Lead Role

 

TIE
BLUE JASMINE - Cate Blanchett
GRAVITY - Sandra Bullock



Best Actor in a Supporting Role


DALLAS BUYERS CLUB
Jared Leto



Best Actress in a Supporting Role


12 YEARS A SLAVE
Lupita Nyong'o


Best Ensemble Cast


AMERICAN HUSTLE
Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper, Amy Adams, 
Jeremy Renner, Jennifer Lawrence, Louis CK


Best Director


GRAVITY
Alfonso Cuarón 


Best Screenplay - Original Material


HER
Spike Jonze


Best Screenplay - Adapted Material


12 YEARS A SLAVE
John Ridley
based on 12 Years a Slave by Solomon Northup


Best Film - Animated Feature


FROZEN
Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee


Best Film - Documentary Feature


BLACKFISH
Gabriela Cowperthwaite


Best Film - Foreign Language Feature


BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR
Abdellatif Kechiche


Best Film - Limited Theatrical Release


UPSTREAM COLOR
Shane Carruth


Best Cinematography


PRISONERS
Roger Deakins 


Best Film Editing


GRAVITY
Alfonso Cuarón, Mark Sanger 


Best Visual Design


THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE
Philip Messina - Production Design
John Collins - Supervising Art Director
Larry Dias - Set Decoration
Trish Summerville - Costume Design


Best Visual Effects


GRAVITY
Timothy Webber 
Chris Lawrence 
David Shirk 
Neil Corbould 


Best Stunts/Stunt Choreography


RUSH


Best Make-Up Effects


THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG
Peter King 
Richard Taylor 
Rick Findlater 


Best Music - Original Score


GRAVITY
Steven Price



Best Music - Original Song


HER
"The Moon Song"
Karen O (music and lyrics), Spike Jonze (lyrics)


Best Sound Design


GRAVITY
Skip Lievsay
Niv Adiri
Christopher Benstead
Chris Munro
Glenn Freemantle


Best Genre Film - Action/Adventure


CAPTAIN PHILLIPS
Paul Greengrass


Best Genre Film - Comedy


THE WOLF OF WALL STREET
Martin Scorsese


Best Genre Film - Fantasy


THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG
Peter Jackson


Best Genre Film - Horror


THE CONJURING
James Wan



Best Genre Film - Science Fiction


STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS
JJ Abrams


Best Film - Animated Short


MR. HUBLOT
Laurent Witz, Alexandre Espigares


Best Film - Live Action Short



HELIUM
Anders Walter


Best Film - Non-Theatrical Release


BATMAN: THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS PART 2
Jay Oliva


Special Achievement Award - Best Voice Acting


HER
Scarlett Johansson


The following films did not win any Essential Film Awards but are noteworthy for their cinematic contributions in 2013:


20 FEET FROM STARDOM
ALL IS LOST
AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY

DON JON

ENOUGH SAID

EUROPA REPORT
EVIL DEAD
FAST & FURIOUS 6
FRANCES HA
IN A WORLD...
JODORWSKI'S DUNE
PACIFIC RIM
PHILOMENA
THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES
SAVING MR. BANKS
THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY
SIDE EFFECTS
THE SPECTACULAR NOW
STOKER
WORLD WAR Z
THE WORLD'S END



Monday, February 24, 2014

FORCED PERSPECTIVE, Ep.42 – Rushing Through Gravity



The ROAD TO THE OSCARS is winding down…

The boys are back in town! On this episode of Forced Perspective, join SportsGuy515 and Adolfo as they get ready for the Academy Awards this Sunday, March 1st, by reviewing 2 of the Best Picture nominees – 12 Years A Slave and Gravity, along with the Golden Globe-nominated Rush and last November’s Thor: The Dark World. Plus, snowstorms galore, SportsGuy enrolls in film school, Batman vs. Superman news, boycotting TMNT, shorter movie trailers, Criterion, 2013’s most polarizing films, the ending of Taxi Driver, Golden Globes recap, official OSCAR PREVIEW, and MORE! A PACKED SHOW – OVER 2 HOURS OF PODCASTING GREATNESS!! DOWNLOAD/STREAM NOW!!!