Showing posts with label Death Becomes Her. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death Becomes Her. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Love, Sydney






Sydney Pollack was always a welcome presence whether as director, producer or even as an actor. The mere mention of his involvement in a project became a guarantee of quality and class. One need only check his listing on IMDB to see the legacy he left behind, a career that is bothadmirable and inspiring. Just think of these moments preserved forever on film as a testimony of the man's talent:



Burt Lancaster's last stand in CASTLE KEEP



Robert Redford and Will Geer's last scene around the campfire in JEREMIAH JOHNSON



The pregnant Bonnie Bedelia singing "The Best Things in Life are Free in THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY?



Robert Mitchum cutting off his pinky for penance in THE YAKUZA


 A hidden microphone tearing through a movie screen in THE WAY WE WERE


The fight with the mailman in THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR


The chase scene in THE ELECTRIC HORSEMAN


Melinda Dillon's early morning breakdown, gathering up newspapers in her nightgown in ABSCENCE OF MALICE


Producer: "I want to make her look a little more attractive. How far can you pull back?"
Cameraman: "How do you feel about Cleveland?" from TOOTSIE


Denys Finch Hatton shows Karen Blixen the beauty of Africa by air in OUT OF AFRICA


The bus sequence in THE INTERPRETER



As a producer, he teamed with the recently deceased Anthony Minghella and others for these:

MICHAEL CLAYTON, COLD MOUNTAIN, CATCH A FIRE, THE QUIET AMERICAN, THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY and PRESUMED INNOCENT, among many others.

Stepping before the camera, Pollack was subtle perfection as well. His work as Dustin Hoffman's agent in TOOTSIE was outstanding. ("I begged you to get some therapy.") He completely stole DEATH BECOMES HER from Meryl Streep, Goldie Hawn and Bruce Willis with just one single scene as a flustered emergency room doctor, an acting primer on how to underplay comedy for maximum effect. Pollack is the saving grace of Woody Allen's HUSBANDS AND WIVES . One of his last roles was an incarcerated oncologist taking care of a dying Johnny Sack in the last season of THE SOPRANOS. The irony that he too succumbed to cancer not long after certainly couldn't have been lost on Pollack.

We lost another good man in Sydney Pollack. He leaves behind a enviable body of work and a life that certainly was worth living. I hope we see his like again in this lifetime. We need a man like Sydney Pollack in this world and we'll be worse off without one.