Tumgik
#kevin jarre
frankenpagie · 15 days
Text
Tumblr media
4.22.24
18 notes · View notes
80smovies · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
21 notes · View notes
90smovies · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
65 notes · View notes
theoscarsproject · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Rambo First Blood Part II (1985). Rambo returns to the jungles of Vietnam on a mission to infiltrate an enemy base-camp and rescue the American POWs still held captive there.
This is genuinely pretty wild in terms of its sheer relentlessness - relentless action, relentless machismo, relentless jingoism. The character angle of the first one is gone, and instead it's just sort of really loud. Still, the stunts are pretty impressive, and the action sequences genuinely look good. A total 80s time capsule, for better and for worse. 4/10.
3 notes · View notes
lunesalsol · 1 year
Link
The Devil’s Own
0 notes
genevieveetguy · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
You have no idea what men of power can do.
No Way Out, Roger Donaldson (1987)
5 notes · View notes
ethan-hawke · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
TOMBSTONE 1993 | dir. George P. Cosmatos & Kevin Jarre
1K notes · View notes
dilfgifs · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
VAL KILMER as DOC HOLLIDAY
Tombstone (1993) dir. George P. Cosmatos | Kevin Jarre
511 notes · View notes
sosooley · 1 year
Text
From Val’s book “I’m Your Huckleberry”
Tumblr media
We love Westerns. We learn everything from Westerns and yet learn nothing from them. We continue killing ourselves in unconscionable ways
I’ve entitled this tome I’m Your Huckleberry for many reasons. I like the unintentional echo of Huckleberry Finn, which is my favorite novel and features my favorite character. I also realize that the line that I, playing the diseased Doc Holliday, articulated has become iconic. I speak it before shooting to death the fearsome Johnny Ringo, played by Michael Biehn. By the way, despite some fans’ contention that in the 1800s the handles of caskets were called huckles and thus the word huckle bearer was a term for pall bearer, I do not say, “I’m your huckle bearer.” I say, “I’m your huckleberry,” connotating, “I’m your man. You’ve met your match.”
In trying to understand the character of Doc Holliday, it’s important to remember he’s a fallen aristocrat, frustrated by his inability to express his authentic self. His greatest retribution for this loss was his caustic wit. His tongue is more lethal than his pistol. Throughout the drama, he’s dying of both drink and tuberculosis. In playing him, I thought of what my dear friend the great screenplay writer Robert Towne had taught me: all insightful dialogue comes out of situations, not predeveloped thought. In that regard, I saw Doc’s situation as dire. I also saw his action as defiance in the face of death. I loved him.
I was especially attuned to the rhythms of Doc’s speech, so much so that I called Kevin with the most specific of questions. I said, “There’s a comma on page thirty-two where I don’t think Doc needs to pause. Wouldn’t it be more effective if he simply drew out the line?”
“When you get more into the drawl,” said Kevin, “you’ll find that the pause is right.”
“Are you certain?”
“I am,” said Kevin. He was. And he was in no mood to argue about a comma. The fact that Kevin proved to be right—the comma was necessary to that musicality—shows that sometimes the writer hears his creation with greater acuity than the actor. Sometimes.
Rehearsals were hilarious. There were five or six actors who had played leads in blockbusters. Many times very small parts seemed to become what the whole film was about.
Fortunately, my wife and daughter were on set. Our little girl glowed; she was radiant and adorable and won the hearts of the entire crew. Everyone wanted to play with Mercedes. All went well until the first day of shooting. Moments of mystical wonderment morphed into a filmmaking fiasco.
Kurt Russell and I were on horses. Horses are always tricky. They want to move. They do move. Even super-skilled riders like me and Kurt had to listen to the whims of our steeds, and this day they were trying to tell us something. Writer Kevin Jarre was directing.
And then Kevin Jarre shouted, “Action!” The problem was, there was no shot. Kevin had positioned the camera at an untenable angle. It seemed to me that Kevin, great writer though he was, didn’t know much about directing. Kurt looked me straight in the eye and said, “Val, we’re in trouble.” I had to say something. I did, as gently as possible, but there was no way my remarks didn’t reveal Kevin’s ineptitude. He didn’t last long. Blockbuster director George Cosmatos was brought in. Dozens of cast and crew members were canned. It was an unholy mess. I teamed up with Kurt to edit long sections of the script, because the studio couldn’t give us any more time or money and we were already a month into shooting, which we now had to make up for. It’s amazing the film turned out as well as it did.
I cherish the experience of working with Kurt, whom I love like a brother. When the Academy widens their awards to include something like the lifetime achievement award for Best, Most Unique, Lovely Person for Decades in a Row, if Kurt isn’t the first recipient, I’ll eat my Doc Holliday hat. The film has a cult following, as does my beloved Doc.
150 notes · View notes
harompontnyolc · 1 year
Text
Fel sem tudom fogni, hogy nekem hogy maradt ki eddig ez a film ezzel a szereposztással
8 notes · View notes
strictlyfavorites · 11 months
Text
4 notes · View notes
80smovies · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
22 notes · View notes
charliedawn · 2 years
Note
That was...flirthing?? I can never tell 😐.
Hey, Peter! You said you like honey?! Well then, you are in luck! *grins widely* We have some of the best quality organic honey in the world! Since I didn't know what kind you would like, I just brought one of each *starts putting different honey jarrs on the table* We have mixed flowers*🍯*, chestnut flower*🍯*, acacia*🍯*, linden*🍯*, honeydew*🍯*, lavender*🍯* and rosemary *🍯*. I really hope you like them *smiles at Peter but then quickly looks down in embarrassment while blushing lightly*
Peter *smiles widely before taking them all* : "I like you."
Tumblr media
Kevin : "Can I have some—?"
Tumblr media
Peter *hisses at him*
Tumblr media
Kevin : "...Nevermind."
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
p0etry-in-m0tion · 1 year
Text
Where saying “No!” magically prevents you from getting shot
0 notes
tallysdhericky · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Sinopse: "O imperador chinês Dragão e seu grande exército são enfeitiçados e enterrados por uma bruxa maldita. Quando o jovem arqueólogo Alex O' Connell é enganado para ressuscitar o imperador, ele e seus famosos parentes devem encontrar uma forma de mandar o mal de volta para a tumba antes que Dragão desperte seu grande exército." Dirigido por Rob Cohen Escrito por Alfred Gough, Miles Millar Produzido por Stephen Sommers, Sean Daniel, Bob Ducsay, James Jacks Estrelando: Brendan Fraser Jet Li Maria Bello John Hannah Michelle Yeoh Russell Wong Liam Cunningham Luke Ford Isabella Leong Gênero: Aventura / Ação / Fantasia Baseado em Personagens de Stephen Sommers, Lloyd Fonvielle, Kevin Jarre País: Estados Unidos Línguas: mandarim / inglês 🎥 Companhias Produtoras: Universal Pictures / Relativity Media / The Sommers Company / Alphaville Films 🎬 Distribuído por Universal Pictures 🎞 Tempo de execução do Filme: 1h 52m 📅 Data de lançamento: 1 de agosto de 2008 (EUA) ⚠️ Classificação Indicativa: 🚫 12 Anos 🚫 🟡IMDb: 5,2 / 10 🧑🏻‍💻Eu: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ( 3/5 | 6.5 ) 🍅Rotten Tomatoes: 13% de Aprovação 🍅 CONSENSO CRÍTICO: "Com efeitos CG medianos e uma nítida falta de diversão, The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor encontra a série além do seu auge." #themummy #themummytombofthedragonemperor #amumia #amumiatumbadoimperadordragao #brendanfraser #jetli #actionmovies #Ação #aventura #fantasia #universalpictures #universalstudios #thesommerscompany #relativitymedia #alphavillefilms #recomendaciones #recomendado (em Brazil) https://www.instagram.com/p/Co3viphODPy/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
transitivo · 1 year
Link
0 notes