Forums > American Independent > Paul Newman, 1925-2008
 Post
Start a New Discussion
Other Discussions
Last reply 7 months ago

Last reply 1 year ago

Last reply 1 year ago

Last reply 2 years ago

Last reply 2 years ago

Last reply 2 years ago

Last reply 2 years ago

Last reply 2 years ago

Last reply 3 years ago

  DavidRobson
Paul Newman, 1925-2008

In Absence of Malice a prosecutor's trying to bring down the Miami mafia. Desperate for clues, he leaks a false story to the press, implicating Michael Gallagher, the son of a dead Mafia boss, as a murder suspect. Reporter Megan Carter (Sally Field) files the story, assured that she and the paper are clear of any wrongdoing.

Suddenly finding that his life is now front page news, Gallagher goes into the paper to complain.

The first time we see Newman in the film is in longshot, quietly entering the paper's office holding the offending issue in his hand. We see Field in the foreground, going about her day, totally unaware that she's about to be hit by a karmic freight train. Newman carries the weight of his anti-heroic history as he walks across the newsroom - director Sydney Pollack makes great use of Newman's history and his presence, his understated approach to Newman's entrance making it that much more powerful.

Finally reaching Carter's desk, he steadily, evenly says "I'm Michael Gallagher." Carter spills her coffee all over her desk, and it's on.

If you've got a favorite Paul Newman moment, please share it here.

Posted by a Jaman admin Originally posted at 10:28am, Sep 29, 2008 PDT by a Jaman admin ( permalink )
DavidRobson edited this discussion 3 years ago
Subscribe to Email Add Your Reply
1 - 4 of 4 replies Pages 1
Reply from: ObsidianVue

Paul Newman falls under that very exclusive category of actors who are wholly responsible for my infatuation with anything film, particularly old Hollywood with a bold capital golden H.

He was an utterly beautiful man to behold on screen, be it at age 20 or 80, and he never wasted audiences’ precious time by getting involved with subpar scripts that lead to even worse films. He had an amazing instinct for the types of films that had a compelling story to tell and let him display his cocky talents. For he was always pretty full of himself while strutting across that screen.

And why shouldn’t he have been? Even when he played despondent losers (and there were plenty of them from “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” to “The Verdict”), you felt drawn into that vertiginious charisma he possessed. He wasn’t a minor star manufactured by celebrity mags, gossip blogs, and entertainment “news” programming, but a true blue radiant Supernova.

For me, it’s peculiar to witness the rise of a new breed of Man-Child stars that everyone seems to be raving about because I madly miss those actors digging deep into full-blown adult roles with intricate histories, personalities, and relationships. Spend a few quality hours with Hud, Nobody’s Fool, Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid, The Hustler, Harper, Cool Hand Luke, and The Sting, and you’ll know what I’m talking about. The magic behind Paul Newman’s artistry is that he did it effortlessly.

May he rest in peace in that grand theatre where creative passion from his generation of actors shall reside for an eternity . . . .

Originally posted at 12:20pm, Sep 29, 2008 PDT
ObsidianVue edited this discussion 3 years ago
Flag this reply?
Reply from: ItsTime2012

I love Paul Newman.. he is such an inspiration to me! I will miss him!

posted 3 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: ypsilee

At the end of "Nobodys Fool", when Mr. Newman fell asleep in the overstuffed chair of his landlady and freind, when a guard laid down on his feet, when he didn't move as if in a very deep sleep ... I cried. Can anyone tell me if this was Mr. Newman's final film? ... I think it was my favorite Thanks, Chris aka ypsilee@charter.net

posted 3 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: DavidRobson

ypsilee - Paul Newman's last role was actually Doc Hudson in Pixar's CARS (and an animated short MATER AND THE GHOSTLIGHT) and he had several other roles between NOBODY'S FOOL and the Pixar stuff (including an Oscar-nominated performance in THE ROAD TO PERDITION). But if you take those roles as a kind of epilogue, NOBODY'S FOOL was a great final chapter in the Newman career. (Trivia: Bruce Willis and Melanie Griffith both accepted scale wages to work with Newman in it)

posted 3 years agoFlag this reply?


1 - 4 of 4 replies Pages 1

Copyright © 2012 jaman.com, Inc. All rights reserved. | Community Guidelines | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Popular Features on Jaman:
Recent Activity on Jaman
Most Downloaded Movies
Top Rated Movies
Free Movies
Movies to Go
Most Discussed Movies
Hollywood Blockbusters
Movie Trailers
U.S. Indie Movies
Documentaries
Suspense Thrillers
Award Winning Films
Bollywood Movies
Kung Fu Movies
Danish Movies
Chinese Movies
Japanese Movies
Hong Kong Movies
German Movies
Italian Movies
French Movies
British Movies
Brazilian Movies
Indian Movies
American Movies
Mexican Movies
Australian Movies
Argentinian Movies
Sundance Film Festival
Cannes Film Festival
Venice Film Festival
Bruce Lee Movies
Jackie Chan Movies
Amitabh Bachchan Movies
Takeshi Kitano Movies
Aishwarya Rai Movies
Shah Rukh Khan Movies

Enjoy films from around the world with Jaman. We're your home for online cinema with thousands of movies to download, own, or watch free instantly online. Explore a wide range of films, preview blockbuster movie trailers, share movie reviews, and find other film fans from around the globe. With fast and easy movie downloads and streaming, you can watch Bollywood, anime, animation, documentaries, indie films and more within minutes! Join today and and get a free movie rental!



Powered by Jaman Networks