Sorry for the lengthy post. I just like The Shining a lot, flawed though it may be.
i just watched Louis Theroux in some kind of self-help-hypnosis world and have to say: DON'T APOLOGIZE. that was a good post :)
― Ludo, Saturday, 21 March 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)
i'm not a good judge of what makes quality acting, but the movie of these i have enjoyed the most is prob. five easy pieces.
― ian, Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:19 (seventeen years ago)
xpost: thanks. I feel a little self-conscious when I'm the only dude on a thread with a long post, which tends to be often, just cuz I'm such a flowery bastard. I wasn't apologizing for my love of TS, but it is a flawed film. The third act just can't support the masterful tone of the first two (but at least it didn't end with an attack of giant hedge bunnies, as King would have preferred).
At first, while voting in polls, I was conflicted about whether I should vote for the objectively "best" thing, or the thing I just happen to like the most. In keeping with the (variably)anti-canonical spirit of ILX, I decided to just go with the latter. So yeah, objectively, Chinatown 9 times out of 10, but I'm voting for the first two-thirds of The Shinning (sic)
― 2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:47 (seventeen years ago)
i want you to hold this poll between your knees
― Past a Diving Jeter (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:54 (seventeen years ago)
oh yeah, well I won't stand for your smartness and sarcasm.
― 2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:07 (seventeen years ago)
can you read THIS sign???
― Past a Diving Jeter (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:22 (seventeen years ago)
has anyone here seen Woooooooolf? it's pretty great.
― droling lapdogs (hmmmm), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:47 (seventeen years ago)
i voted the shining in spite of the hamminess; it's just such an indelible movie for me. i could have easily voted for any of his other classic roles.
― battlestar elastica (get bent), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:52 (seventeen years ago)
i'd love to have a film festival of some of those lesser-known/underrated nicholson movies. i've never seen marvin gardens.
― battlestar elastica (get bent), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:54 (seventeen years ago)
Anyone wanna make an argument for The Trip?
― 2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Saturday, 21 March 2009 23:14 (seventeen years ago)
Actually, I think he directed that one. I can't remember if he appeared in it or not.
― 2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Saturday, 21 March 2009 23:20 (seventeen years ago)
The Pledge is a fantastic novel (I got the Penguin w/Jack Nicholson's face on the cover). Glad to see the film is rated well by some here!
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 21 March 2009 23:24 (seventeen years ago)
He was good in these films that I did not dig:
Carnal Knowledge (1971)Terms Of Endearment (1983)Hoffa (1992)The Departed (2006)
He could do nothing to make me watch these films again:
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981)The Witches Of Eastwick (1987)Batman (1989)Anger Management (2003)About Schmidt (2003)
― Pete Scholtes, Sunday, 22 March 2009 18:14 (seventeen years ago)
Chinatown easy. The Pledge is good.
― chap, Sunday, 22 March 2009 18:18 (seventeen years ago)
Remake of Postman is awful.
― Alex in SF, Sunday, 22 March 2009 18:32 (seventeen years ago)
gotta be the passenger for me. one of my favorite movies.
― ryan, Sunday, 22 March 2009 18:50 (seventeen years ago)
The Witches of Eastwick is fun -- my favorite of his hambone performances.
― The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 22 March 2009 19:21 (seventeen years ago)
I'm going for Chinatown on this one, definitely. Has there ever been a thread on favourite director cameos? I adore Polanski in this.
I enjoyed that film a lot, but I don't think Nicholson was in it as an actor. Saw it too long ago to make a proper argument for it as a good film, but it was definitely fun.
― emil.y, Sunday, 22 March 2009 19:59 (seventeen years ago)
the trip is the russ meyer one w/ peter fonda right? saw it recently...no jack. think he (co?)wrote it
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 22 March 2009 20:02 (seventeen years ago)
Yeah, it was Peter Fonda. Corman was the director, not sure if Meyer had anything to do with it. It's kind of Meyer-esque in places, I guess.
― emil.y, Sunday, 22 March 2009 20:21 (seventeen years ago)
Yeah, I just checked on IMDB & Nicholson wrote it. I'm not sure why I associated him so closely with the film. Was he in another, similar, film about the LSD experience?
― 2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Monday, 23 March 2009 00:57 (seventeen years ago)
Psych-Out? Or even Easy Rider?!
― emil.y, Monday, 23 March 2009 01:04 (seventeen years ago)
vote for easy rider so i'm not the only one
― abe being busy (k3vin k.), Monday, 23 March 2009 01:41 (seventeen years ago)
i prefer Wolf to The Shining and Blood & Wine and Batman to The Departed.
― Past a Diving Jeter (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 March 2009 01:45 (seventeen years ago)
xxpost: Sure, ES is pretty psychedelic, but I'm thinking of something where the depiction of the "trip" is the central premise. I'm guessing Psych-Out is the one I'm (not really) remembering or, at least, so the title would indicate.
― 2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Monday, 23 March 2009 01:47 (seventeen years ago)
Also wrote Head, the Monkees movie, but not in it so far as I remember...
― Pete Scholtes, Monday, 23 March 2009 02:29 (seventeen years ago)
he is, for 5-10 seconds.
Poll also doesnt have the film where he played Peter Lorre's son.
― Past a Diving Jeter (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 March 2009 02:34 (seventeen years ago)
I don't know anyone in charge of making movies, but I wish they would start making more movies like Hells Angels on Wheels.
Get on a motorcycleGo to carnivalGet drunk and stonedPaint Naked Womenrepeat then have fight that goes wrong...
That is a movie. The end is pretty classic as Nicholson has a total 'what the hell just happened' look on his face.
― earlnash, Monday, 23 March 2009 05:52 (seventeen years ago)
Voted for The Passenger... Tremendous movie and gets overlooked a lot. The Shooting is my #2 pick
― Chris Barrus (Elvis Telecom), Monday, 23 March 2009 07:07 (seventeen years ago)
Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.
― System, Saturday, 28 March 2009 00:01 (seventeen years ago)
Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.
― System, Sunday, 29 March 2009 00:01 (seventeen years ago)
Ironweed got a vote?!
― The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 29 March 2009 00:05 (seventeen years ago)
far less scandalous than motherfucking Shining -- quintessential bad Jack, save for red bathroom scene.
― Past a Diving Jeter (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 29 March 2009 07:12 (seventeen years ago)
aw come on it's a great, funny flick.
― Henry Frog (Frogman Henry), Sunday, 29 March 2009 11:24 (seventeen years ago)
hmm, i just watched carnal knowledge. great film.
― Yellow Carded (titchyschneiderMk2), Sunday, 29 March 2009 12:20 (seventeen years ago)
I saw it while ago, I hadn't even heard about such a film before, and was pleasantly surprised. Great performance by Nicholson as a smug bastard. I think it's quite rare to see Hollywood films where none of the protagonists are really sympathetic at all. (Though did feel sorry for Ann-Margret's character.)
― Tuomas, Sunday, 29 March 2009 13:16 (seventeen years ago)
Strikes me as one of those culturally necessary films after the kind of Mad Men era, and I love Ann-Margaret so it was sort of both compulsory and painful viewing. But like a lot of films from that time, it's just so clearly WRITTEN but without the joys of good writing--the worst of naturalism and mannerism, if that makes sense. I just watched The King of Marvin Gardens and had a slightly similar reaction, again with great performances in a game that seems both dreary and rigged. Nice study of classic '70s-film atmosphere though.
― Pete Scholtes, Sunday, 29 March 2009 15:25 (seventeen years ago)
Agreed. Ellen Burstyn gives the best performance in KOMG anyway.
― The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 29 March 2009 15:29 (seventeen years ago)
I don't think I saw this poll, but Prizzi's Honor deserved a vote. Too bad it was misspelled.
― Zero Transfats Waller (Oilyrags), Sunday, 29 March 2009 22:44 (seventeen years ago)
poor easy rider
― pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Sunday, 29 March 2009 23:15 (seventeen years ago)
Nothing for Batman :(
― billstevejim, Monday, 30 March 2009 07:24 (seventeen years ago)
missed this, would have gone Shining.
yeah null points for batman, bit surprised
― Ant Attack.. (Ste), Monday, 30 March 2009 08:51 (seventeen years ago)
Really good in Hoffa, which, I was surprised to remember, had some good bits.
― Bud Huxtable (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 May 2009 23:46 (seventeen years ago)
Hoffa's pretty ridiculous, but mostly enjoyable - devito's the best dude in that movie though
i think i would've voted for The Border
― ℳℴℯ ❤\(◕‿◕✿ (Princess TamTam), Saturday, 26 February 2011 13:34 (fifteen years ago)
75 today. Sad scene.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vys2K_18uk
― clemenza, Sunday, 22 April 2012 12:56 (fourteen years ago)
http://life.time.com/culture/jack-nicholson-unpublished-photos-1969/?iid=lf%7Clatest#1
― World Congress of Itch (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 April 2012 11:37 (fourteen years ago)
watched both the border & the passenger today -- similar disconnected vibe in both, but hes consistently compelling to watch in p much every scene of each, think i actually preferred the border a little
― johnny crunch, Saturday, 4 May 2013 23:30 (thirteen years ago)
the border's really good.
a few good men was on tv the other day so i watched it, jack's great in the 'i eat breakfast' scene. horrible score
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Sunday, 5 May 2013 00:09 (thirteen years ago)
it's nicely subtle in that nicholsons character isnt the boy scout cop caricature outraged @ his corrupt colleagues &/or w/ a crusading woody for mistreated brown ppl but more i think that he just realizes that even going along w/ it, getting $ & w/e would only mean his wife would buy more worthless furniture & whatnot so y not do the "right" thing~
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 5 May 2013 01:09 (thirteen years ago)
otm
― Ask The Answer Man (sexyDancer), Sunday, 5 May 2013 04:34 (thirteen years ago)
The point at which he starts imitating himself is Cuckoo's Nest. Though he doesn't always.
― Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Sunday, May 5, 2013 9:10 PM (three years ago)
i haven't seen this film in a while, but i don't remember jack being too ott in this one. if anything he plays it down considerably from the larger-than-life character in kesey's novel.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 24 April 2017 02:10 (nine years ago)
I think he means that's where you start to see the seeds sewn for the rat mimicry to come.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 April 2017 02:47 (nine years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wK7TiA9qmuU
― On Some Faraday Beach (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 24 April 2017 13:10 (nine years ago)
Film school should just be Jack Nicholson talking about Michelangelo Antonioni for free on the internet. pic.twitter.com/52kRFCjxxs— John Frankensteiner (@JFrankensteiner) October 15, 2020
― Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Thursday, 15 October 2020 04:19 (five years ago)
The Crossing Guard is okay--over-the-top resolution (which is moving right at the end anyway), good stuff along the way. Sean Penn, one of our finest actors, was probably at the pinnacle of his career, acting in and directing a series of high-profile films. So he's got Nicholson and Angelica Huston, John Savage, Piper Laurie, Robin Wright (his wife), David Morse--it's an actor's film. He dedicates it to Charles Bukowski, so we know he has literary friends (just in case you still think of him as Jeff Spicoli). He gets a good performance out of Priscilla Barnes, from Three's Company. People were probably clamoring to be in anything he directed.
I'd say the best reason to watch it (Nicholson and Huston are fine) is Robin Wright. She so definitively became Claire Underwood for me, it was startling to see her younger, and how natural and quietly compelling she was. She dances to Salt-n-Pepa and it works. No use for Forrest Gump, but I know why Forrest fell in love with her.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 5 April 2022 02:09 (four years ago)