Showing posts with label Kirk Douglas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kirk Douglas. Show all posts

Sunday, August 20, 2023

The Fury (1978)

Peter Sandza (Kirk Douglas) is an intelligence operative in the Middle East whose son, Robin (Andrew Stevens), is a powerful psychic.  Plans of accompanying Robin to school for psychics in Chicago are disrupted when terrorists attack.  Robin believes his father was killed in the attack, but Peter sees that the attack was meant to get him out of his son's life.  Though he shot the man who betrayed him, Ben Childress (John Cassavetes), he failed to kill him.  A year later, Peter is in Chicago to search for his son.  The discovery of a psychic girl, Gillian (Amy Irving), provides a link to the school.  Robin is not currently at the school and reports are that he died.  Peter doesn't believe it.  If Robin was dead, the efforts to thwart his search would end.  In fact, Robin has been taken to a private home where he has a doctor assigned to him alone.  It is clear that Robin's psychic powers have grown immensely but at the cost of his sanity.

The movie is unfocused.  Rather than follow Peter in his hunt for his son, we get the overview of everyone doing their thing.  There is Gillian having trouble controlling her developing powers, Hester (Carrie Snodgrass) acting as Peter's agent at the psychic school, Childress complaining to everyone about the problem du jour, Dr. McKeever (Charles Durning) trying to drown his regrets in alcohol, and others still.  The reunion of Peter and Robin is incomprehensible to those not familiar with the book.  Having done the mother with psychic daughter in Carrie (1976), De Palma decided he needed to balance that with a father who had a psychic son.

There are some surprises in the cast.  Daryl Hannah stars as one of Gillian's classmates and Dennis Franz (NYPD Blue) is a uniformed cop concerned about damaging his new police car.  His role offers some of the rare levity in this dark film.

It has its moments but is just so-so.

Monday, January 7, 2019

Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957)

Wyatt Earp (Burt Lancaster) is riding through Texas on the trail of Ike Clanton.  He drops in to see an old friend, Cotton Wilson, and discovers that Cotton let Ike ride through unhindered.  Once a tough as nails lawman, Cotton is now interested in feathering his nest.  Earp leaves unhappy.  At the hotel, he finds Ed Bailey (Lee Van Cleef) lying in wait for Doc Holliday (Kirk Douglas).  Though he doesn't know Holliday, he still feels obliged to warn him.  Warned, Holliday kills Bailey in a duel and flees a lynching with Earp's reluctant help.
 
Back in Dodge City, Earp is irritated when Holliday shows up.  He tries to drive the gambler out of town but finally agrees to let him stay provided 'No guns, no knives, no killing.'  Holliday has a reputation.  In the ensuing days, Holliday helps Wyatt on a few occasions and a friendship develops.  Also, Wyatt falls in love with Laura Denbow (Rhonda Fleming) and plans to give up his badge in order to marry her.  Then word comes from his brother Virgil in Tombstone: Ike Clanton is making trouble.  Reluctantly leaving Laura, he rides to Tombstone.
 
After some preliminaries that result in the death of James Earp (Martin Milner), Billy Clanton (an astonishingly young Dennis Hopper) meets with Wyatt to schedule the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.  Wyatt, Virgil, and Morgan (played by DeForrest Kelly, better know as Doctor McCoy from Star Trek) are joined by Doc Holliday.  The gunfight is more like a military skirmish that lasts five minutes rather than the historical 30 seconds.  In the end, every Clanton and McLaurey is killed, as are Johnny Ringo, and Cotton Wilson.
 
Though entertaining, it is far from historical.  Rather than Wyatt being Charlie Basset's deputy, this has it the other way around.  Burt's Wyatt is clean shaven, as are all of his brothers.  The Earps are known for their full handlebar mustaches.  Ike Clanton survived the O.K. Corral and Ringo wasn't even there.  The only fatalities were the McLaury brothers (Tom and Frank) and Billy Clanton.  Tombstone (1993) does a far better job with the history though it too has its faults.
 
Kirk Douglas makes for a good Doc Holliday.  By contrast, Lancaster plays Wyatt Earp as some proto-Boy Scout, which is far from the mark.  A clear product of the 50s, it is nonetheless fun.