Monday 3 January 2022

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2003: Kiefer Sutherland in Phone Booth

Kiefer Sutherland did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying The Caller in Phone Booth.

Phone Booth is an effective thriller, though as with any Joel Schumacher film to describe it as purely good is always difficult, about a man Stu (Colin Farrell) who is forced to stay in a phone booth as he is tormented by an unseen sniper. 

Although there are other characters in this film the essential drama is carried by two performance, one being the near one man show offered by Colin Farrell as the man seeing his life of lies unraveling around him while also being terrified, and the voice of a sniper. Originally played by Ron Eldard, whose other work suggests to me why he was replaced by Kiefer Sutherland. Sutherland is an actor who I am getting to in this endeavor of mine for the first time, and he might one of the most random actors ever in terms of what he is going to bring to a role. On the outset of this film though we know that Sutherland will be bringing something special, that being his deep cutting voice. This for all essential purposes is a vocal performance, and I won't treat that as any kind of limitation in this instance, because it isn't for Sutherland. He plays the unseen sniper who begins to antagonize Farrell's Stu, a man we see as a somewhat amoral huckster who is contemplating cheating on his wife and in general seems to have a selfish attitude towards life. Sutherland comes as the threat of the film, and that is instantly obvious from just the innate intensity of his work, as he begins by speaking of Stu's mistake by turning down a pizza he sent him. Sutherland's voice work is remarkable in that he opens without obvious intensity, in that he's not yelling or anything, however the particular tone of his voice instantly puts one on edge. 

Sutherland's voice is of the true voyeur, in that one tweak away and he'd be the voice on an adult phone sex line. It is the brilliance of his performance really that the almost alluring quality in his voice in itself also is the threat of it. This as the caller speaks towards Stu with a familiarity, even honestly a kind of seductive quality that makes his initial slip-ins of his knowledge of Stu's personal life, including his wife and potential mistress, all the more unnerving as his intention is clearly not just to make Stu scared, but to also oddly entice him into following his orders. Although the caller's motivations are stated sorta later on, a point I will get to, and state what is perhaps the worst aspect of the film, I think one can more so garner this from Sutherland's performance than what his character states bluntly later on. This as Sutherland portrays this sense of self-satisfaction from every word he speaks to Stu and names all of Stu's secrets. Sutherland portrays the caller as someone who obviously gets his kicks from the activity of this particular torture. This as Sutherland is nearly orgasmic in the voice, and wholly in turn creates this disturbing psychopathic tendency of the caller. The caller who Sutherland crafts as very much a predator playing with his prey, this particular as he reveals that he has a sniper rifle. Revealed so potently by Sutherland "Doesn't that just torque your jaws", and speaks it with this wonderful delight as it sparks such fear into Stu.  

Now Phone Booth is not a film I consider great, and not exactly good in the most precise turn, as if you scratch it all it crumbles, however it is often compelling, and the reason why are the two central performances. While Farrell I think shows both signs of his later greater work, and some of the limitations of his earlier work, Sutherland however is simply on point throughout. When the film works is when Sutherland is speaking, and he takes the concept of the man stuck into the phone booth with a killer on the phone to its promise. Sutherland's sinister playfulness captures the right tone for every beat to create menace, while also being an entertaining villain. When the caller claims to be Vietnam vet Sutherland brings the expected darkness as he speaks towards the trauma, before bluntly laughing it off as an obvious falsehood based upon his age. Sutherland accentuates every point of the drama that is there to great effect, and I'd say Sutherland was entirely primed to make a great film based on this premise, as he has the technique down all in just his voice. Now there is briefly one live action portion of the Sutherland at the end of the film, which I hate the most. This where Stu has seemingly escaped the ordeal though sedated and visited by the caller. The caller who reveals himself to be a morality serial killer, a trope that I hate so much when played straight by the filmmakers which will obviously be the case for Schumacher. Anyway aside from that plot point, which I don't like, Sutherland doesn't play into that which I appreciate, playing the caller as purely a fiend. This right down for his brief live action scene of just is there really there just for glance, a well performed glance of sinister intent, however that isn't the point of this performance. The point of this work is a weapon in vocal form, a mental weapon, and there Sutherland is a brilliant tormentor, and this is great performance, that makes the most of a premise, that the film itself can't quite live up to wholly.

59 comments:

Matt Mustin said...

Didn't care for the movie too much (Schumacher just cannot direct, I'm sorry) but yes, Sutherland is awesome.

Mitchell Murray said...

I always prefered his dad in terms of acting talent, but I'll admit Keifer can be quite good himself. And with that voice, I'm genuinely surprised he hasn't done more VA work beyond COD and Metal Gear.

Luke Higham said...

Louis: See any more recommendations.

Matthew Montada said...

Hey guys. Here are two films I watched lately and my grades for them as well as my ratings for their casts:

The Lost Daughter: 4.5/5
Nightmare Alley: 4.5/5 (watched it today)

Letterboxd Review for Nightmare Alley: https://boxd.it/2r6gQt

Cast Ratings
The Lost Daughter:
Olivia Colman - 5
Dakota Johnson - 2
Jessie Buckley - 5
Paul Mescal - 2.5
Dagmara DomiƄiczyk - 3
Jack Farthing - 2.5
Peter Sarsgaard - 2.5
Ed Harris - 3.5

Nightmare Alley:
Bradley Cooper - 5
Cate Blanchett - 4.5
Toni Colette - 4
Willem Dafoe - 4.5
Richard Jenkins - 3.5
Rooney Mara - 4.5
Ron Perlman - 3
Mary Steenburgen - 3
David Straithairn - 4
Tim Blake Nelson - 3/3.5

Louis Morgan said...

Beast I thought was a good (though not great) psychological thriller/character study, slightly longer than it needs to be and slightly more obtuse, however overall engaging in the examination of someone on the fringe finding herself intrigued by someone near a similar edge. Elevated though by another great Buckley performance (honestly I hope my effusive praise in such short time doesn't curse her a la Hardy and Fassbender to mediocre projects).

Buckley - 5
Flynn - 3.5
Gravelle - 3
James - 3.5

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Thoughts on Buckley and where would you rank her (I guess she's in between Collette and Theron).

Won't be long until she's ahead of Ullmann whenever you see her fantastic work in War & Peace.

8000S said...

Louis: Your thoughts on the screenplays of Drunken Angel and Stray Dog.

Matt Mustin said...

Buckley really is something else.

Mitchell Murray said...

Everyone: Thoughts on this interview with Phil LaMarr? I found it informative and highly entertaining, especially with LaMarr effortlessly channelling the voices of his past roles.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p7pGdlxbooU

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: Once you finish it, your thoughts on Ted Lasso season 1 and your cast ranking?

Robert MacFarlane said...

Gonna assume if he watched it, Goldstein would be his MVP. Just a hunch.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Goldstein is my Season 2 MVP (and my Supporting Actor win) without a doubt. For season one, I'm more split between Sudeikis and Waddingham.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Goldstein is my MVP for both seasons

Marcus said...

Very impressive how Buckley has already given five 5-star performances. At this rate, this is bound to be her decade.

Luke Higham said...

Marcus: She's 5-equivalent for both Taboo and Chernobyl so it's 7. She's been on an absurd run of form.

Matt Mustin said...

Luke: And Fargo.

Luke Higham said...

Matt: I believed Fargo was 1 of the 5 Marcus was referring to as it is more recent.

Anonymous said...

Louis: Have you ever seen any of Sutherland's work in 24?

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Taika Waititi went Ridley Scott on Armie Hammer. He's been replaced by Will Arnett. NGW is finally coming this year.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

I for one, can't wait for Fassbender's review in 2027.

Luke Higham said...

Tahmeed: This could finally be his comeback to the blog after 7 years. Next Goal Wins and David Fincher's The Killer.

Louis Morgan said...

Anonymous:

Regarding Cobra Kai, which once again succeeded for making me care about such a silly concept at this point, however the drama, humor and especially the characters all worked here. I think actually an easy improvement over season 3, with wiser use of the young cast (leaving most dramatic moments to Maridueña but I think there was a general improvement here particularly from Buchanan and List not being used as a femme fatale. Also Mouser actually thought was surprisingly effective at being cruel.). Also just a better overall management of tone, remarkable considering they made Terry Silver a genuinely terrific character here...no small feat.

1. Thomas Ian Griffith(Also enjoyed the retcon of his former performance as high on Cocaine, which would explain a few things).
2. Xolo Maridueña
3. Ralph Macchio
4. William Zabka
5. Martin Kove
6. Jacob Betrand
7. Courtney Henggeler
8. Mary Mouser
9. Tanner Buchanan
10. Peyton List
11. Dallas Dupree Young
12. Griffin Santopietro
13. Gianni DeCenzo
14. Oona O'Brien
15. Vanessa Rubio
16. Aedin Mincks
17. Hannah Kepple
18. Owen Morgan
19. Selah Austria
20. Khalil Everage

Luke:

Buckley - (I have to say just how remarkable it is how confident of a performer she is and that with every role she really does go head first in terms of tackling it. This performance being her very own Saint Maud or Censor in many ways with playing with this character on this edge of a mental breakdown and running with it brilliantly. Buckley really is a master of a subtle intensity as she can bring it out with such an unassuming lead up. This working so fantastically here in the moments the character reveals her borderline self Buckley makes it so natural, while so fierce and unnerving. Here she brings this sort of sense of the anxieties of the character that reveal themselves in moments of genuine unease in herself but also creating unease in others. These flips in singular moments are so brilliantly performed because she makes them so easy. She brings this sense of the unnatural as she shows the way the character's mind spirals. This as she can be brutal in one moment with this cutting manner, and genuinely empathetic in others, she makes it always the right whirlwind of someone unsure of how exactly to exist herself.)

That would be her ranking.

Louis Morgan said...

8000's:

Drunken Angel isn't Kurosawa's greatest screenplay however it reveals his greatness so often and easily marks why it was his breakout post-war. This is one where I think where Kurosawa's work succeeds so much is wholly within character, here I think the plot is more rudimentary which wasn't always the case with Kurosawa. The film really isn't about the returning leader yakuza, or even about the young yakuza's tuberculosis, though that is the crux of the plot that is there. It is rather about the characters of Sanada, Matsunaga, and the world they live. Each of these elements are so well defined by Kurosawa and each really lash out against cliche. This as the doctor is genuinely a drunken fool in so many ways, though true to his wish to do good, the yakuza all about revealing the vulnerable soul below all the bluster. This while all in a keenly realized world of the slum, of course amplified by Kurosawa's direction. Kurosawa's screenplay uses the plot here to challenges his characters more than anything and in doing so crafts such a potent and moving piece about two men interacting with their flaws and either living to be beyond them or failing to rise above them.

Tahmeed:

Well I enjoyed season 1 (despite Ted's poor taste when it comes to Scorsese films), and I have to admit coming into it I was perhaps the people Ted initially encounters in being curmudgeonly and thinking I could only enjoy a cynical comedy. Well in fact I was wholly won over by his inspirational feel good antics of the lead, and his influence on everyone all around to find more optimistic paths. Ended up just really enjoying it for its straight forward joy in so many ways, and its exploration of these characters with a rare bright smile for a comedy.

1. Brett Goldstein
2. Jason Sudeikis
3. Hannah Waddingham
4. Juno Temple
5. Jeremy Swift
6. Brendan Hunt
7. Phil Dunster
8. Nick Mohammed
9. Anthony Head
10. James Lance
11. Annette Badland
12. Toheeb Jimoh

Anonymous said...

Louis : Your thoughts on thomas ian griffith in cobra kai

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: Your thoughts on your 1-8 from the Ted Lasso cast.

Anonymous said...

Louis, your thoughts on Dallas Dupree Young and Griffin Santopietro's performances in Cobra Kai.

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Louis:your 15 best Kevin Kline and Robin Williams scenes?

Anonymous said...

Ytrewq: He gave his top 20 for Kline in Crowe's review for Romper Stomper.

1. Kkkken is coming to kkkill me - A Fish Called Wanda
2. Fish and Chips - A Fish Called Wanda
3. "Apologize" - A Fish Called Wanda
4. Beating a Burglar - A Fish Called Wanda
5. Speaking Italian - A Fish Called Wanda
6. Don't Call Me Stupid - A Fish Called Wanda
7. Traffic cursing - A Fish Called Wanda
8. CIA - A Fish Called Wanda
9. Meeting Ken - A Fish Called Wanda
10. Airplane - A Fish Called Wanda
11. An Old Man - Chaplin
12. Presidential Speech - Dave
13. Tennis with Chaplin - Chaplin
14. Breakdown - The Ice Storm
15. Pirate "attack" - The Pirates of Penzance
16. Simple apology - Sophie's Choice
17. Figuring the budget - Dave
18. Explaining his whereabouts - The Ice Storm
19. Pirate King Intro - The Pirates of Penzance
20. Meeting with Steve - Cry, Freedom

Anonymous said...

Louis, would you ever reconsider your rating for Pat Morita in The Karate Kid? Watching Cobra Kai made me appreciate his performance even more.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: How would you rank the Cobra Kai seasons? I'd go 1>4>3>2, with it being very close between 1 and 4.

Mitchell Murray said...

Well I finished Book 4 of "Legend of Korra" this afternoon, and it was either as strong as Book 3 or slightly weaker - I haven't decided yet. The episode dedicated to Korra's depression and recovery is one of the best of both shows (Airbender and Korra), and though I knew about it before hand, Toph's return was cool. As for the primary antagonist, Kuvira gave me a similar impression as Commander Zhoa; Physically imposing and ruthless, but simply not the most original or memorable villain in terms of personality.

That segues nicely into my overall thoughts on the series. As an animated show, "Legend of Korra" is technically quite solid, and there are moments where it does indeed reach greatness. However it's also neccesary to compare it to the preceding show, and it's there where a lot of the problems become apparent. I specifically noticed that while TLA gets stronger with each season, Korra sort of peaks early on and zig-zags in quality through the next three chapters. For myself, it's simply not as consistent, funny or quotable as TLA, and it's also fairly easy to see where it takes inspiration from Airbender (Ex. Naga and Pabu basically being stand ins Appa and Momo). Again, "Korra" is hardly terrible on the whole and can actually be very entertaining - I just wish most of the praise I could give it didn't also come with "Airbender did it this way/better".

Luke Higham said...

Louis: See any recommendations.

Tim said...

Mitchell: that early peak might be vecause it was supposed to just be a one-season spin-off, but they were forced to expand it.

i myself have only ever seen some episodes of season 1, but never really sat down and did an actual watch through to any real degree. how was J. K. Simmons in it?

8000S said...

Mitchell: If you're curious, watch Black Lagoon. It's the only show where I like the dub as much as the Japanese version.

Not gonna lie, I do miss Canadian anime dubs.

8000S said...

Louis: In your opinion, who are the top 10 coolest actors of all time?

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Vanessa Kirby has replaced Jodie Comer in Kitbag. Any thoughts on it.

Mitchell Murray said...

Tim: Simmons, and by extension the character of Tenzin, is one of the most consistent aspects of "Legend of Korra" across all four books. This is as Simmons is a typically reliable presence, and provides the needed authority, depth and even humour in his vocal performance. He might not give my favourite performance in the show's cast (he has competition from Steve Blum, Mindy Sterling and Henry Rollins), but he's a sturdy supporting player nonetheless.

8000s: I'm focusing more on english language series at the moment (so not Anime), but I'll have to make a note about that one.

Mitchell Murray said...

I also want to stress again that I won't steer anyone away from "Legend of Korra" if you want to watch it. I'd only add that if Airbender is a 8-9/10, Korra would be a 7/10 in general (solid 8/10 in Book 1, weak 7/10 in Book 2)

Tim said...

Louis: your thoughts on the Score, Screenplay and Direction of Michael Clayton?

Anonymous said...

Top 10 Coolest actors for me are:

Clint Eastwood
Samuel L. Jackson
Charles Brosnan
Steve McQueen
Robert Mitchum
Jeff Bridges
Jack Nicholson
Paul Newman
Denzel Washington
Humphrey Bogart

Louis Morgan said...

Anonymous:

Griffith - (Again his performance is coming initially from such a ridiculous place, as to say his performance in Karate Kid 3 is ridiculous is a bit of understatement. Griffith instead here gives basically Terry Silver origins, in that each scene of his is part of the character's arc. This as he begins seemingly the contented wealthy man now in his place, and Griffith delivers the appropriate subtly of his work with this seeming reflection against the character's earlier choices. Griffith though delivers that quiet discontent in the man that reveals itself in his initial outburst, however, it is then this progression, though more regression towards the Silver we know from his original appearance. This though is done in a genuinely surprising way though as Griffith delivers seemingly almost a good nature initially as he takes upon the role back in Cobra Kai, and makes you believe he might be a more balanced man just trying to bring a spark back in his life. His descent really is brilliantly performed as he makes this a tangible switch towards such an insane and devious man previously known by the end. He thankfully doesn't go fully into his old performance, rather he finds the right variation on an older man that has a more genuinely sinister streak now in his mania. Finding this sense of really the man dealing with a genuine conflict in himself that fuels this regression that turns him into a proper villain.)

Anonymous:

Young and Santopietro - (As much as this is really a c-plot within the scheme of the series, though used well in terms of Robbie's growth, I was genuinely impressed by both of these performances at the center of it. This is really just finding the right degree of petulance immaturity both in one's bullying and the other's innocent victim-hood initially. I was impressed though how both successfully segued in their performances in terms of maturity, from Santopietro moments of genuine regret to the growth in the vicious intensity in Young. Honestly when the story-line was introduced I expected it to be a weight on the series, but actually found it successful, with both performances actually delivering being a reason why.)

Tahmeed:

Let me hold off on that as I'm in the middle of season 2, that way my thoughts can entail both seasons.

Ytrewq:

Williams:

1. Explaining the murder - Insomnia
2. Interrogation - One Hour Photo
3. Meeting on the boat - Insomnia
4. Breaking out of his shell a little - Awakenings
5. First Broadcast - Good Morning Vietnam
6. Meeting after the interrogation - Insomnia
7. Guilty reunion - The World According to Garp
8. Trying to calm Leonard - Awakenings
9. Exit - Good Morning Vietnam
10. Threatening the lovers - One Hour Photo
11. First scene - Aladdin
12. Police Interrogation - Insomnia
13. Encouraging Eddie - Good Morning Vietnam
14. Stalking the family - One Hour Photo
15. Meeting the Ellen Jamesians - The World According to Garp
16. Advising Aladdin - Aladdin
17. Meeting awakened Leonard - Awakenings
18. First Phone Call - Insomnia
19. Getting Fired - One Hour Photo
20. Spilling Coffee - Death to Smoochy

Anonymous:

It's certainly possible.

Tahmeed:

1
4
3
2

8000's:

If we're talking about purely onscreen persona:

Charles Broson
Alain Delon
Clint Eastwood
Harrison Ford
Bruce Lee
Steve McQueen
Toshiro Mifune
Robert Mitchum
Paul Newman
Denzel Washington

Luke:

After hearing the news of Comer dropping I was hoping we'd hear a more age appropriate casting. As is, unfortunate as Comer's performance in The Last Duel made me very interested to see what she'd do here. I do like Kirby though, so I don't think it is a terrible switch by any means.

Louis Morgan said...

Tim:

I mean it's been awhile but sure.

Gilroy's direction I think is the weakest element of the film, as you might as well call it medium shot the movie, with almost every scene shot and edited in the exact same way. I can really see why his directorial career petered out so quickly afterwards. It is really just a boring film as directed as there is little to no inspiration and just one, frankly less than, workman choice after another. The scenes are SO samey in execution and he really fails his own script in so many ways.

I think his script actually is considerably better than his direction, and if you had say Michael Mann (which his direction is very poorly emulating) or hell even co-star Sydney Pollack even I could see making this a better film. I do think there is some really rote stuff in terms of the mechanics of the plot, particularly the nature of the exact corruption and such. Where actually the film does actually have some strong material is in the central character's journey and really just the individual speeches he has when trying to be the fixer or eventually being the fixer in the end. The last speech for example actually is pretty dynamite stuff, and I think there are moments of inspiration in there. Again though I think the material itself is let down by Gilroy's uninspired direction, and is another example of a film that would've been better with a second voice.

James Newton Howard's score I think is largely just some pretty forgettable ambient music here, and not his most inspired score. This with just some random mood techno variations that don't amount to all that. The only part where he really flexes is "25 Dollars Worth" which is a fine more emotional cathartic piece, however still a highlight in overall what is a fairly unremarkable, though not bad, score.

Louis Morgan said...

Luke:

Stop Making Sense is a terrific concert film, and Jonathan Demme just does a fantastic job in placing you within the stage and the concert. This is in such a striking and atmospheric way, while ostensibly just filming the concert as it is. He shows how it is done honestly, but that's not surprising given he would later do the same with Spalding Gray just talking for an hour and 20 minutes.

Aidan Pittman said...

Louis: Glad to hear you dug Stop Making Sense. What would you say were your three favorite songs from the film?

Bryan L. said...

Louis: How do you think Cate Blanchett would’ve fared as Lucille Ball? (With her being the original choice for the part).

Also, your 1960s cast & director for The Lost Daughter.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: Your thoughts on these following Ted Lasso season 1 scenes:

'Let it Go'/panic attack
Darts game speech
'I forgive you'

Tim said...

i finished reading the novelization of "Once Upon A Time In Hollywood" yesterday and ... it's weird.

there is some fun to be had, especially with some Tarantino-dialogue that didn't end up in the finished movie and some more information about Cliff Booth and Brandy.

But it's also insanely logorrheous; they talk about Rick's fake mustache three different times within 300 pages, always saying the same things essentially the same way. There is a scene where the characters are in a theme restaurant, and he actually lists which posters are signed by whom ...

And it makes some insanely odd choices story wise. The ending it finds is in itself a good point, but it would be only two hours into the movie. Yeah, the entire last 30-40 minutes are just not in there. There is a little flash-forward to it, not even a paragraph long and really undescriptive.

The most fun scene in the film and arguably the entire point of telling the fucking story in the first place, skipped!

Odd choices like that that kind of seem like Tarantino weirdly didn't understand his own writing really. Like, telling the Spahn Ranch scene competely from Squeaky Fromme's perspective? No. Just No. Stop. That is just wrong.



also, yes, the book does say what happened on the boat, and i frankly would have preferred the opposite of what it said there

Aidan Pittman said...

R.I.P. Peter Bogdanovich

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

RIP Peter Bogdanovich.

Luke Higham said...

RIP Peter Bogdanovich

Tim said...

R.I.P. Peter Bogdanovich

ruthiehenshallfan99 said...

RIP Peter Bogdanovich

Emi Grant said...

R.I.P. Peter Bogdanovich

RatedRStar said...

RIP Peter Bogdanovich

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

RIP Peter Bogdanovich

Matt Mustin said...

Watched Waves (2019) last night. Ambitious to a fault, and overdirected, but the things that work are amazing.

Harrison-4.5
Russell-5
Brown-5
Hedges-3.5
Goldsberry-3
Demie-3(Would be slightly higher if not for one reaction which felt strangely muted)

Matt Mustin said...

3.5 for Goldsberry, actually.

Matt Mustin said...

RIP Peter Bogdanovich

Louis Morgan said...

Aidan:

1. "Once in a Lifetime"
2. "This Must Be the Place"
3. "Life During Wartime"

Bryan:

I think she would've been more fitting in terms of facial expression of her work, though I'm sure her vocal performance would've been similar.

The Lost Daughter 1960's directed by Michaelangelo Antonioni:

Leda: Shelley Winters
Young Leda: Jean Seberg
Nina: Shirley Knight
Lyle: Melvyn Douglas

Taheemd:

Let It Go - (I mean good excuse for showing off Waddingham's impressive pipes, though excellent in terms of the role reversal between Rebecca and Ted, with her enjoying life so purely and Ted suffering. With then the great subversion of her going to comfort him in such poignant moment in all honesty.)

Darts - (Perhaps why he likes Color of Money in his speech, and just a wonderful summation of his kind of positive philosophy so well realized. This as his positive spin with the Walt Whitman speech, comes from a place of pain, pain though factored in with a perspective that changes the whole idea.)

I Forgive You - (I loved the scene as it subverted the typical choice of such a situation, which would be Ted just finding out then being mad, and eventually they'd make up after stalling the narrative for awhile. Instead Rebecca coming to him with it feels like such an earned critical growth, and instead this meeting between the two over their mutual marital woes. Brilliantly performed by both actors in this moment of really cathartic and empathetic sadness shared in what is truly heartwarming in the purest sense.)


























R.I.P Peter Bogdanovich