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Iconic devilish imagery of Peter O'Toole from THE STUNT MAN Year: 1980 Rating: **** |
It's no surprise director Richard Rush took a decade to make THE STUNT MAN since it adheres to his early creatively-maneuvered camerawork — visually making every scene matter and every moment count...
Only in this case, instead of 90-minute drive-in flicks, it's an epic labor-of-love Hollywood satire starring Peter O'Toole as a flamboyant, borderline psychotic director who desperately hires a Vietnam-vet criminal as his titular STUNT MAN...
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
Herein second-billed Steve Railsback is the true lead, which is good and bad since, during the more dramatic, expository sequences mostly involving vulnerable ingenue (as a vulnerable actress) Barbara Hershey, he still bares campy residual from playing Charles Manson in HELTER SKELTER...
And is far more naturally-suited to intense physical action, either by his character Cameron, initially chased by cops in a fast-paced prologue — or taking on the spontaneous fall guy gig...
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with Charles Bail |
And while the film-within-a-film's directed by O'Toole as Eli Cross (as if David Lean attempted a bizarre World War I potboiler), it's coordinated by bonafide stuntman Charles Bail, teaching the ropes in the most fun and involving sequence... from a fake fall to dangerously leaping from rooftops... only to return sporadically to give advice...
At which point Railsback's Cameron is already knee deep in on-set problems, ignited by the illegal ruse of becoming the actual stuntman — who died after falling off a bridge while Cameron was being chased across it...
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN with fictional lead actor Adam Roarke |
Which is the plot moving both THE STUNT MAN film and its central character forward — yet it's overwhelmed by either the annoying and intrusively comedic 1930's-flapper-era score, or bogged-down by pretentiously bickering melodrama between cast and crew (including a miscast Allen Garfield as a whining/put-upon scriptwriter)...
All needing more activity, as in perpetual on-screen movement that underrated auteur Richard Rush — from 1960's counterculture flicks involving either brooding teachers or vicious bikers — was a genuine master of.
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with Peter O'Toole & Adam Roarke as actor being stunted for
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Barbara Hershey in THE STUNT MAN |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with Charles Bail
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with Charles Bail |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with makeup lady Sharon Farrell
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Allen Garfield miscast as the scriptwriter in THE STUNT MAN with Peter O'Toole
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with Barbara Hershey |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN with Allen Garfield |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN with Barbara Hershey
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Antagonistic investigator Alex Rocco in THE STUNT MAN |
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN with Steve Railsback & Charles Bail
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN with Charles Bail
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Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole in THE STUNT MAN |
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A Stunt Man as The Stunt Man in THE STUNT MAN |
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Actress's family Dee Carroll, Charles D. Wallace & sister Leslie Winograde in THE STUNT MAN |
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Actress's family Dee Carroll, Charles D. Wallace & sister Leslie Winograde in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole with Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Peter O'Toole with Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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Charles Bail with Steve Railsback in THE STUNT MAN |
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