fpw Wrote:At last on DVD. I’ve been looking for this 1967 Lee Marvin film for years. Directed by John Boorman and based on Donald Westlake’s THE HUNTER, it’s dated but still works to some degree. I like Mel Gibsons “Payback” (based on the same novel) better. If you haven’t seen “Point Blank,” rent it along with “Payback” and watch them back to back. It’s a great tutorial in how movie making – directing, lighting, tinting, cutting, scoring, cinematography, etc. – changed over three decades.
FF= 1.0
fpw Wrote:At last on DVD. I’ve been looking for this 1967 Lee Marvin film for years. Directed by John Boorman and based on Donald Westlake’s THE HUNTER, it’s dated but still works to some degree. I like Mel Gibsons “Payback” (based on the same novel) better. If you haven’t seen “Point Blank,” rent it along with “Payback” and watch them back to back. It’s a great tutorial in how movie making – directing, lighting, tinting, cutting, scoring, cinematography, etc. – changed over three decades.
FF= 1.0
Maggers Wrote:Thanks for the heads up. I saw Lee Marvin's "Point Blank" a milion years ago and can't remember it. I'll check them both again.
BTW, I love Lee Marvin. I'd love to see a retrospective of his films, though I wonder if he'd seem the same in every one. Not quite sure about that.
Maggers Wrote:Thanks for the heads up. I saw Lee Marvin's "Point Blank" a milion years ago and can't remember it. I'll check them both again.
BTW, I love Lee Marvin. I'd love to see a retrospective of his films, though I wonder if he'd seem the same in every one. Not quite sure about that.
Maggers Wrote:Thanks for the heads up. I saw Lee Marvin's "Point Blank" a milion years ago and can't remember it. I'll check them both again.
BTW, I love Lee Marvin. I'd love to see a retrospective of his films, though I wonder if he'd seem the same in every one. Not quite sure about that.
man bites snake Wrote:I think Lee Marvin was on the bottle when Point Blank was made. That could actually account for some character authenticity. And I liked Payback as well. Steve McQueen was the same way as Marvin, love him or hate him he was unapologetically his own person. That in itself commanded acknowledgement and/or respect that most actors shy away from now a-days. My personal favorite of this era is Once Upon A Time In The West. A truly beautiful film that was charcter specific and driven. They really don't make them like that any more, although Lawrence Kasdans Wyatt Earp was highly underappreciated, imho.