Mga app ng Google
Pangunahing menu

Post a Comment On: Steve Sailer: iSteve

""The Wrestler""

15 Comments -

1 – 15 of 15
Anonymous green mamba said...

Rourke did an excellent and entertaining turn as a meth "cook" in the movie "Spun" from a few years back. Having lost track of Rourke's career, at the time I thought it was a sort of comeback.

"Body Heat" may have been the first role that got him noticed, but it was in Barry Levinson's "Diner" that he had his real breakthrough part.

2/20/09, 2:47 AM

Anonymous Gene Berman said...

Just thought I'd add a sad note.

A day or two ago, Verne Gagne, 82, got into a fight with another resident of a nursing-home "memory-loss" (Alzheimer's) unit in Minnesota and mangled him somewhat, after which the guy, in his 90s, died.

Gagne was one of the most celebrated wrestlers of his era, twice NCAA champ, subsequently popular on the pro circuit, and then an active organizer of the modern pro, especially-for-TV spectacle.

Another wrestler, easily the winningest wrestler in history, was Henry Wittenberg, whom I knew very slightly. Starting in his soph or jr. year at CCNY (never any prior athletic experience), he piled up over 300 wins in AAU competition, with Olympic Gold in '48 and Silver in '52. He beat Gagne in the AAUs almost at the beginning of his career, during which he lost only 2 bouts.

Henry's also in a nursing home (upstate NY), also an Alzheimer's patient, and doesn't even recognize his best friends from former life.

2/20/09, 5:45 AM

Anonymous Tony Danton said...

Insurability is one of those interesting behind the scenes vectors making casting what it is in feature film production, which has been underdiscussed.

One reason you never see very old people in film even where the part calls for someone very old (the only fairly old substitute here) is insurability. There were a lot of parts that should have went to duffers of the Bukowski or Burroughs variety in the 80s that didn't because of this factor.

Insurability is also a key plot complication in Arthur Miller's last play, "Finishing the Picture". If the protagonist (who, like 'Maggie' in the play that wrecked Miller's commercial career, is baldly really You Know Who) doesn't finish the picture her career- and the co-protagonist, Miller's own alter ego's cash machine!-is done for.

In real life, You Know Who was pushed over the edge at least partly when she was fired from her never finished next project so Fox could cash in on the insurance, and ostensibly killed herself.

It's quite an end to a career so defined by the end of someone else's.

2/20/09, 7:30 AM

Anonymous daveg said...

The movie 9 1/2 weeks got me to the 'next level' in a relationship more than once during college.

It was actually a great performance, but nobody like to talk about it because it is too 'hot' for some.

2/20/09, 8:37 AM

Blogger Danindc said...

He was pretty good in Fantasy Island.

2/20/09, 8:59 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

John Wayne was Irish? He was mostly Scots Irish and English and culturally as anglo-protestant as you can get.

Disproportionally Irish? Clark Gable, Cary Grant, Bogart, earlier Fairbanks, what?

2/20/09, 9:35 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm trying to figure out what Steve has against boxing

2/20/09, 4:21 PM

Blogger Jim O'Sullivan said...

Take it from an expert: he's that particular brand of nut known in my "community" as "Irish crazy." He's the quintessence. If you're of Irish descent, the more intelligent and/or creative you are, the crazier you are likely to be. Believe me, I know whereof I speak. That's my real name at the top of this comment.

2/20/09, 5:19 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm trying to figure out what Steve has against boxing

Brain damage and disfigurement? Too few whites? Too few brain damaged and disfigured whites?

2/20/09, 5:36 PM

Anonymous anony-mouse said...

Thomas Sowell, in his writings about various American ethnicities showed some eerie smilarities between Irish-Americans and African-Americans (both good and bad)

2/20/09, 6:02 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"The movie 9 1/2 weeks got me to the 'next level' in a relationship more than once during college."

Gross.

2/21/09, 12:19 AM

Blogger Ray Sawhill said...

Rourke was great in "Spun," and he was also great in "Sin City."

2/21/09, 11:15 AM

Anonymous l. ron hoover said...

There's a hilarious bit in the current Onion, "Oscar Handicapping":

"Best Leading Actor, Mickey Rourke, 8-11: Rourke's performance as a contrite actor just looking to do the best work of his career has wowed Academy voters"

http://www.theonion.com/content/infograph/oscar_handicapping?utm_source=featureband

2/21/09, 1:30 PM

Anonymous josh said...

To Gene Berman re Verne Gagne: Any word re Mad Dog Vachon??

2/22/09, 1:33 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think he just fancied himself the next Brando and started aping Brando's self-destructive "up yours" behavior. But he failed to realize that the days when studios would put up with that kind of crap from movie stars are over.

2/23/09, 6:03 PM

Comments are moderated, at whim.
You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

Comment moderation has been enabled. All comments must be approved by the blog author.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.
OpenID LiveJournal WordPress TypePad AOL