First Paul Walker, now Peter O'Toole, all the legends are dying!
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ameckert2000 — 12 years ago(December 16, 2013 06:12 AM)
Ok. Walker's death was tragic because he was young, not because he was a brilliant actor. He also seemed like a nice guy. He was a good looking guy and in lots of blockbusters that the MTV generation really liked.
However, you can't say "well, although he really only did Varsity Blues, Pleasantville, and all The Fast and The Furious Movies, I'm sure his Lawrence of Arabia is right around the corner"
By the time O'Toole was 40, he had already done Lawrence of Arabia, The Lion in Winter, Becket, and many many many others. Not to mention all of the plays he did here and in England. I mean, Lawrence was his first big film. I believe he was only in his 20s when he did it.
Walker's death, sad because he was young and popular.
O'Toole's death is sad for us, but he REALLY lived a great life. He had wonderful and talented friends, and left behind a ridiculous amount of brilliant films. It's tragic not because he didn't have a long life, but because he was the last of that type of actor. -
rogerscorpion — 12 years ago(December 15, 2013 01:59 PM)
Did you really mention O'Toole & Walker, in the same breath?
That's like the Emmys making a big fuss over Cory Monteith, while virtually ignoring Jack Klugman, who gave us 5 decades of fine work.
Carpe Noctem! -
BlondeVixen — 12 years ago(December 15, 2013 03:27 PM)
Never got into the Fast & Furious movies, so didn't know who Paul Walker was until after he died. His death was tragic, he was nice, generously gave to others, young & good looking, but he was not a movie legend.
Peter O'Toole, absolutely a legendary actor. One of the greats, Oscar nominated many times, a long career. -
hobnob53 — 12 years ago(December 15, 2013 10:30 PM)
Peter O'Toole was a true legend, and one of the most acclaimed and astonishib68ng talents of stage and screen. There aren't enough words in the English language he commanded so fiercely to describe his talents and contributions to the art of acting. An actor for over fifty years, whose awards and nominations alone are testament to his abilities.
We've also just learned tonight of the death of another true acting legend, Joan Fontaine, dead at 96. This a few days after the passing of Eleanor Parker, like Fontaine a three-time Oscar nominee. These people had major careers and were
genuine
legends.
Even Tom Laughlin, whose death Thursday has just been announced tonight, was a legend in a minor sort of way a cult hero of sorts.
But to mention Paul Walker and Peter O'Toole in the same breath as "legends" is preposterous. (And to give Walker top billing on the thread topic, on the site for Peter O'Toole, is outrageous.)
Walker was a nice guy, a decent if hardly versatile actor, but he never really made the big time, mostly being known simply for the "Fast and Furious" franchise, which is hardly legendary stuff. When your career mainly consists of appearing in an endless series of the same basic thing, and not in varied and versatile films and roles, your stardom is questionable, and you're certainly no legend. The rest of his career was just average. He wasn't remotely as well-known as these other performers. His death gave him more publicity than anything he ever did in life, which is kind of sad. He died tragically and too young, and maybe he'd have had a bigger career had he lived, but sorry, he was no legend. And I doubt he'd have claimed to be one, either. -
King_Of_Fuh — 12 years ago(December 15, 2013 10:53 PM)
The OP is trolling. Eleanor Parker, O'Toole, and Joan Fontaine make up the trio. Walker was an OK person and mediocre actor, Tom Laughlin was a great man and even worse actor than Walker. That's no trolling, just the objective facts, m'am, all provable in a court of law.
If you put me on ignore, then how can I notify you when I win the lottery? -
EjioforBond — 12 years ago(December 16, 2013 07:34 AM)
I
had
heard of the Fast and Furious franchise. But bear in mind that our ability to remember things that matter to us depends upon our ability to tune out or forget material that we either don't care about or actively disdain. There's only so much memory
any
brain, no matter how capacious, will store. Knowing that the Fast and Furious franchise was crap, why would I endeavor to learn the names of cast members? (Vin Diesel is a name I've had the misfortune to encounter in other contexts, but Walker seems to have gained a reputation almost exclusively through his work in F&F.)
I have nothing but contempt for that franchise, even more so after reading up on it in the days following the crash. So I'd say that my "reading filters" were working pretty well in that instance. -
snsurone — 12 years ago(December 17, 2013 02:28 PM)
The OP may be a troll, but, believe me, he isn't NEARLY as bad as that SOB who kept starting threads titled "Jack Nicholson Warned Him/Her"!
I hope that jerk has been banned permanently from IMDb message boards!
sad year though