scotpens
03-26-2006, 01:39 AM
Acclaimed director Richard Fleischer, whose films included "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," "Fantastic Voyage" and "Soylent Green," has died at age 89. Here's the AP story:
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/O/OBIT_FLEISCHER?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2006-03-25-23-31-06
Dave Hussey
03-26-2006, 10:25 AM
Sad news :(
- Leagues and Voyage are two of my all time favorite movies.
Huzz
PhilipMarlowe
03-26-2006, 10:50 AM
Sad news :(
- Leagues and Voyage are two of my all time favorite movies.
Huzz
Me too, but on the bright side 89 is not a bad run, especially with a legacy of work like his.
gruffydd
03-28-2006, 07:41 PM
Don't forget "Compulsion" with Stockwell and Dillman and Welles (Leopold/Loeb, "Rope", et al).
The Batman
03-28-2006, 07:44 PM
Aside from his notable acheivements as a film director, Richard Fleischer was also the son of animation pioneer Max Fleischer ( which made him an interesting choice when Walt Disney tapped him to direct 20,000 Leagues! )
Both LEAGUES and FANTASTIC VOYAGE are films which made big impressions on me in my youth.
Rest in Peace Richard Fleischer! You will be missed!
- GJS
Carson Dyle
03-28-2006, 09:03 PM
If you're a fan of Fleischer's films, and would like to learn more about what went into making them, you might want to check out his very candid and entertaining memoir "Just Tell Me When to Laugh".
Here's a summary from Kirkus Reviews:
"Merry Memoirs by Hollywood director Fleischer, helmsman of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, The Boston Strangler, Fantastic Voyage, Doctor Doolittle, Mandingo, Compulsion, and 43 other films. Lighthearted takes on tough moments fill the standout pages of Fleischer's 77 years in the flicks. He was born (in 1916) to the movies, his father being the celebrated animator Max Fleischer, who gave film life to Betty Boop, Popeye, and many other memorable screen characters. Dad's great black beast in the industry was Walt Disney, who later offered the author the job of directing Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea--which Fleischer could accept only with his father's blessing. Among the many wonderful moments rendered here are the wrestling with the mechanical problems of Jules Verne's giant squid--as well as with Orson Welles in the full tide of his ego (he later apologized to Fleischer for his blowups). Quite moving is the death of Edward G. Robinson, who, at 80, filmed the last frames of his career--his marvelous death scene in Soylent Green--under the author's direction. Fleischer limns the immense ego of 20th Century-Fox studio head Darryl F. Zanuck, for whom he worked many times, who's shown with slimy cigar and brown-stained teeth, marching about giving orders. Kirk Douglas, star of the Verne vehicle, as well as of one of Fleischer's best films, The Vikings, also gets rapped (and forgiven) for rampant egoism, while Howard Hughes--then head of RKO--remains an idiotic perfectionist and yet has an adventurer's winning glow. John Wayne, Robert Mitchum, Rex Harrison, and Charlton Heston all have their moments center stage as well. Women--never great power-wielders in Fleischer's heyday--get little play here. Top-flight tales from a director modest about his works and days."
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