Chris Knipp
08-21-2012, 04:26 PM
http://img818.imageshack.us/img818/4395/scottobitblog480.jpg
[NYTimes blog]
An Appraisal
A Director Who Excelled in Excess
Tony Scott Made Movies as a Maximalist
By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: August 20, 2012
Tony Scott, who died on Sunday at 68, apparently from suicide, was one of the most influential film directors of the past 25 years, if also one of the most consistently and egregiously underloved by critics. One of the pop futurists of the contemporary blockbuster, he helped turn Tom Cruise into a megastar with the 1986 smash “Top Gun” and was instrumental in transforming Denzel Washington, over the course of five movies they made together — beginning with the locked-jaw masculinities of “Crimson Tide” (1995) and ending with the working-class heroics of “Unstoppable” (2010) — into a global brand. Mr. Scott made a lot of people rich and even more people happy with his enjoyably visceral work.
The rest HERE. (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/21/movies/tony-scott-made-movies-as-a-maximalist.html)
My favorite of his films would be TRUE ROMANCE, a breezy, pretty faithful rendering by non-Tarantino of a Tarantino script, with some hilarious and classic moments by Brad Pitt, Gary Oldman, Dennis Hopper, Chris Walken, and James Gandolfini.
[Reports of inoperable brain cancer were denied by the family and subsequently retracted by news agencies, including ABC, leaving the suicide a mystery. A number of witnesses saw Scott jump off the Vincent Thomas Bridge in San Pedro and he reportedly left two suicide notes.]
[NYTimes blog]
An Appraisal
A Director Who Excelled in Excess
Tony Scott Made Movies as a Maximalist
By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: August 20, 2012
Tony Scott, who died on Sunday at 68, apparently from suicide, was one of the most influential film directors of the past 25 years, if also one of the most consistently and egregiously underloved by critics. One of the pop futurists of the contemporary blockbuster, he helped turn Tom Cruise into a megastar with the 1986 smash “Top Gun” and was instrumental in transforming Denzel Washington, over the course of five movies they made together — beginning with the locked-jaw masculinities of “Crimson Tide” (1995) and ending with the working-class heroics of “Unstoppable” (2010) — into a global brand. Mr. Scott made a lot of people rich and even more people happy with his enjoyably visceral work.
The rest HERE. (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/21/movies/tony-scott-made-movies-as-a-maximalist.html)
My favorite of his films would be TRUE ROMANCE, a breezy, pretty faithful rendering by non-Tarantino of a Tarantino script, with some hilarious and classic moments by Brad Pitt, Gary Oldman, Dennis Hopper, Chris Walken, and James Gandolfini.
[Reports of inoperable brain cancer were denied by the family and subsequently retracted by news agencies, including ABC, leaving the suicide a mystery. A number of witnesses saw Scott jump off the Vincent Thomas Bridge in San Pedro and he reportedly left two suicide notes.]