Monday, January 7, 2008

Favourite shows and movies...




Yesterday, saw a repeat airing of the 35th AFI life Achievement Award. Last year's (2007) award went to Al Pacino. He is one of my favourite actor.

His friends and co stars gave him great tributes.

"Al Pacino is an icon of American film. He has created some of the great characters in the movies--from Michael Corleone to Tony Montana to Roy Cohn. His career inspires audiences and artists alike, with each new performance a master class for a generation of actors to follow. AFI is proud to present him with its 35th Life Achievement Award."
- Sir Howard Stringer, chair, AFI Board of Trustees

The Achievement of Al Pacino
By Helene Siegel

The trustees of the American Film Institute have selected Al Pacino to receive AFI's 35th Life Achievement Award.

Nearly 40 years after delivering a shockingly real performance as Bobby, the strung-out dope addict in THE PANIC IN NEEDLE PARK, Al Pacino--one of the most honored actors of his generation--is still refining his craft, and defining it for the next generation.

His driving intelligence and quest for excellence have given us such indelible screen characters as tortured mob chief Michael Corleone, Det. Frank Serpico, irresistible bank robber Sonny of DOG DAY AFTERNOON, blind tango dancer Lt. Col. Frank Slade of SCENT OF A WOMAN and Tony Montana, a gangster who remains a cultural force 20 years after the release of SCARFACE.

Between and around those legendary roles, this actor's actor plays on the nation's best stages in works by Israel Horovitz, Bertolt Brecht, David Mamet, William Shakespeare and, most recently, in Oscar Wilde's Salome. His passion for language and the art of acting led him to write and direct LOOKING FOR RICHARD, an award-winning documentary that explores the beauty and relevance of Shakespeare for a modern screen audience. At the same time, he stretches his muscles as a filmmaker with personal projects like THE LOCAL STIGMATIC and CHINESE COFFEE.

Once Pacino discovered his gifts, as an only child in the Bronx of the 1940s and then at the Actors Studio, where as a young adult he studied his craft under the tutelage of mentors like Charlie Laughton and Lee Strasberg, he honored them by making a singular commitment to his craft. By plunging into acting as his way to connect with the world, the intense young actor learned to express himself like no other.

Building on the techniques that fellow Method actor Marlon Brando displayed so brilliantly in A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE and ON THE WATERFRONT, Pacino plumbed his own psyche to create a finely wrought cast of ruthless gangsters, conflicted cops, street punks and mid-life wrecks who, even from the depths of depravity, can make us love them, or feel what it must be like to walk in their shoes.

Sidney Lumet, who directed the actor in DOG DAY AFTERNOON and SERPICO, tried to explain the Pacino magic: "Everything stems from some incredible core inside of him. I wouldn't think of trying to get near it, because it would be like getting somewhere near the center of the earth. What comes out of his core is so uniquely his own."

That core can feel as elemental as the human condition itself, and when it flashes on the big screen it touches something deep inside of us. Like that other movie gangster with the streets of New York written on his face, James Cagney, and that female outlaw Bette Davis, Pacino's power is volcanic. It keeps us in our seats just waiting for it to explode with operatic intensity. Whether he's standing up to the tobacco industry and big media as crusading producer Lowell Bergman in THE INSIDER, seducing another pathetic sucker as salesman Ricky Roma in David Mamet's GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS, or slipping into bedlam as the raving Roy Cohn in ANGELS IN AMERICA, the truth feels red hot. And it is compelling to watch.

That same man is also capable of the finest restraint. In the averted glances of worn-out street soldier Lefty Ruggiero at the end of his game in DONNIE BRASCO, in the stooped shoulders of weary investigator Dormer out to crack one more case in INSOMNIA, and in the hollow, calculating eyes of Michael Corleone, Pacino has drawn characters that shimmer with the nuances of real life. He is a master at portraying men who have perhaps seen too much, but who, like Det. Frank Keller in SEA OF LOVE, yearn for a second chance.

In life and on the screen Pacino has not played it safe. He committed to the actor's life as a poor kid from the Bronx who quit the School of Performing Arts at 16 to help support his family. He held jobs as a messenger, an usher and a building superintendent while apprenticing at avant-garde off-off-Broadway theater companies until joining the Actors Studio and dedicating himself to acting full time at the age of 26. He struggled, sleeping on friends' floors, appearing off-Broadway in The Indian Wants the Bronx, and screen-testing several times, at the age of 32, for the role in THE GODFATHER that would cement his place in cinematic history.

Paramount thought he was too short and understated to play a gangster, and suggested less ethnic actors for the part. But Francis Ford Coppola, who had seen Pacino on the stage in New York, knew he had found a true son for Brando, a casting decision for which author Mario Puzo was forever grateful.

"The great bonus was Al Pacino," remembered Puzo in his book, The Godfather Papers. "As Michael, Pacino was everything I wanted that character to be on screen. I couldn't believe it. It was, in my eyes, a perfect performance, a work of art."

In his quest to uncover what it means to be alive, Pacino has applied himself tirelessly to his craft and the result is a body of work that glows with vitality. His gifts have not gone unrecognized. The eight-time Academy Award nominee has taken home an Obie, a Tony, an Oscar and an Emmy.

As the consummate actor said about identity, at a 2007 seminar at the AFI Conservatory, "Who you are is really about what you do."

And Al Pacino acts like no other.



So, here is my list of favourite movies and shows (hehe not in any order).

1) Godfather Trilogy - Got the DVD set...including the making and unshown scenes.

2) Lord of the Rings - Got the extended version for Two towers and Return of the
King.

3) Star wars - DVD set for the first original 3.

4) Band of Brothers - DVD set which includes the making of the show.

5) Friends - One day will have the whole set of their 10 seasons.

6) West Wing - Got the whole 7 seasons (i have forgotten how many times i
have watched it).

7) God of Gamblers - The ones with Chow Yun Fatt.

8) A better tomorrow - I, II and III

9) Young and Dangerous - The whole series of it (6 or 7 of them).

10) The longest days - World War 2 movie.

11) A bridge too far - world war 2 movie.

12) Saving private Ryan - World war 2 movie.

13) Kate and Leopold - Who does not like Meg Ryan and Hugh Jackman.

14) Sleepless in Seattle

15) Devil's Advocate - Another great acting by Al.

16) Scent of a Woman -Al Pacino's blind tango and driving a Ferrari

17) Superman movies.

18) A walk in the clouds - Good acting by Keanu Reeves.

19) Rush hour series - Jacky Chan and Chris Tucker

20) Brave heart

21) Gladiator

22) James Bond series - Grew up in the Pierce Brosnan era.

23) Batman movies.

12 comments:

sting said...

hey! Godfather is also in my top 10 list :-) so is star wars...

Nightwing said...

Hi Sting,

Thanks for dropping by...not bad..got something in common...:)

Unknown said...

Nightwing,
Hey that is one long list you know? We also have some in common. Lord of the Ring, believe it or not, I finished the whole trilogi four times already. Friends gives me the tickle too hahaha. But over here, we cannot live without the Simpsons hahaha.
Hey, nice posting man. Keep it up ;D.
Have a nice day.

Nightwing said...

Helo Akmal,

Ya..Can never get enough of LOTR.

Simpsons, i knew i forgot something..:)

Sue said...

Hey..I like the Godfather as well!! Good!

Unknown said...

wow!you have lots of fav movie in your list..i don't even have one.:)
I only have a chance to watch kids movies that's it..LOL

Nightwing said...

Hi Sue,

Not bad, u and Sting also like Godfather...:)

Nightwing said...

Hi Sweetiepie,

Kids movies also nice...:) Very wholesome....keep it up.

Don't introduce the movie world violence to them yet.

DCampbell aka Puteri said...

I like the Superman movies, Batman movies, Lord of the Rings trilogy, and I like many of Tim Allen movies. :-) I like Crimson Tide too. I especially like The Gods must be crazy! Hahah, such a funny movie!

Nightwing said...

Hi Puteri,

Ya, Crimson tide...good movie. Great acting by Gene Hackman and Denzel....:)

If i list my fav actors movie...don;t think enough space....haha.

Thanks for sharing the movies u like..:)

Anonymous said...

Hey, me and my hubby also like to watch Al Pacino movies. But nowadays, we did not get chance anymore to watch dvd, since the children took over the place. :)

Nightwing said...

Hi Nyumix,

Don;t worry, once the children is older, can share with them Al Pacino's movies...:)

Ya, at the moment, children must come first..:)