― deej, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:42 (seventeen years ago) link
― horseshoe, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:42 (seventeen years ago) link
― HI DERE, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:42 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:44 (seventeen years ago) link
― Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:47 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:47 (seventeen years ago) link
― horseshoe, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:48 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:49 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:49 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:50 (seventeen years ago) link
― the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Friday, 6 April 2007 18:50 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:50 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:51 (seventeen years ago) link
― Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:51 (seventeen years ago) link
― gershy, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:52 (seventeen years ago) link
― Laurel, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:52 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:52 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:52 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:53 (seventeen years ago) link
― the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Friday, 6 April 2007 18:54 (seventeen years ago) link
― gershy, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:56 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:57 (seventeen years ago) link
― gershy, Friday, 6 April 2007 18:59 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:01 (seventeen years ago) link
― the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Friday, 6 April 2007 19:02 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:02 (seventeen years ago) link
― Oilyrags, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:06 (seventeen years ago) link
― the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Friday, 6 April 2007 19:10 (seventeen years ago) link
― milo z, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:12 (seventeen years ago) link
― milo z, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:13 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:14 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:17 (seventeen years ago) link
― the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Friday, 6 April 2007 19:18 (seventeen years ago) link
― milo z, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:19 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:19 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:21 (seventeen years ago) link
― ghost rider, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:21 (seventeen years ago) link
― and what, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:22 (seventeen years ago) link
― Alex in Baltimore, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:25 (seventeen years ago) link
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:27 (seventeen years ago) link
― Alex in Baltimore, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:29 (seventeen years ago) link
― brownie, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:33 (seventeen years ago) link
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:34 (seventeen years ago) link
― horseshoe, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:34 (seventeen years ago) link
― rps, Friday, 6 April 2007 19:35 (seventeen years ago) link
i will watch the shit out of this
― If I was a carpenter, and you were a douchebag (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 7 January 2013 18:25 (eleven years ago) link
same
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 7 January 2013 20:15 (eleven years ago) link
you didn't see Spencer Tracy playing Joe Meek when he was Al's age.
(in part cuz he was already dead)
― saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Monday, 7 January 2013 20:19 (eleven years ago) link
People I Know wisely left off the list. Quote from Ebert on the DVD case: "One of Al Pacino's best performances." Not sure what Roger was thinking--whatever Kael said about later Jack Lemmon is in full effect here. Pacino's exhausting to watch.
― clemenza, Wednesday, 7 August 2013 04:34 (eleven years ago) link
Stephen Holden: "Eli is the latest flaming creature to be posted in Mr. Pacino's vivid gallery of driven, bleary-eyed maniacs operating in a twilight zone of harried agitation where terminal exhaustion threatens to tumble into madness."
That pretty much nails it. ("Vivid" notwithstanding, he didn't intend that as praise.)
― clemenza, Wednesday, 7 August 2013 05:00 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.evilchili.com/videos/7511/
― balls, Wednesday, 7 August 2013 07:04 (eleven years ago) link
On set:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Bb0CFicCcAAKPKD.jpg
― tbd (Eazy), Monday, 23 December 2013 21:41 (ten years ago) link
I always forget that it's Pacino in the first two Godfather movies. Like that photo, I'm like Oh! Michael! and then wait, I mean, Pacino. Everything about him just screams Michael Corleone. You know? That sounds kinda silly now that I say it out loud...hmph
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 23 December 2013 22:31 (ten years ago) link
I understand that perfectly. He plays characters before 1975, and you remember the characters. After that, it's an endless procession of bleary-eyed maniacs operating in a twilight zone of harried agitation where terminal exhaustion threatens to tumble into madness.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 24 December 2013 13:44 (ten years ago) link
Not sure why The Panic in Needle Park was omitted here. No story to speak of--not even an attempt--and if you're as squeamish as I am when it comes to needles, you'll spend five minutes looking away from the screen. Holds up pretty well. Pacino has almost nothing in common with bug-eyed late Pacino, but I can see where the early version has his own set of mannerisms (there are little inflections here that are identical to what he does as Michael Corleone). Kitty Wynn is memorably bedraggled--had to be reminded, when I checked her IMDB page, that she was also in The Exorcist. One-minute part for Paul Sorvino, plus a character actor, Sully Boyar, I recognize from various films (Dog Day Afternoon most prominently). There's another kid who I could have sworn was Bud Cort, but no.
http://image1.findagrave.com/photos/2010/219/11368041_128126184771.jpg
― clemenza, Monday, 17 February 2014 21:20 (ten years ago) link
Good long profile:http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/09/15/caught-act
― the man with the black wigs (Eazy), Friday, 12 September 2014 00:11 (ten years ago) link
The birthday girl, Kam, in blue satin shorts and a diamanté tiara, waved Pacino and Sola over to the leather banquette where her posse of svelte girlfriends and their men were huddled. While Sola plunged into the crowd of chatty celebrants, Pacino took a barstool at a table behind them and ordered a plate of barbecued chicken. As he ate, the standup comedian Billy Bellamy, who is credited with coining the phrase “booty call,” appeared. “We’re blessed, man,” Bellamy said. “I’m blessed. You killed in that Liberace shit, man.”“That was Michael Douglas,” Pacino said, wiping barbecue sauce off his fingers.
“That was Michael Douglas,” Pacino said, wiping barbecue sauce off his fingers.
― the man with the black wigs (Eazy), Friday, 12 September 2014 00:29 (ten years ago) link
the whole segment in the bowling alley is so classic, recreate and film it stat
― johnny crunch, Friday, 12 September 2014 01:05 (ten years ago) link
stopped reading it because it was all acting is when i feel most real and that is my depth and purpose, and like, my muse and shit
also the children are our future
― mookieproof, Friday, 12 September 2014 01:12 (ten years ago) link
Big takeaway from this: no need to meet him in person; best self is in performance.
― the man with the black wigs (Eazy), Friday, 12 September 2014 18:54 (ten years ago) link
Problems with the mostly-monologue two-character Mamet play China Doll in previews on Broadway:
http://www.broadwayworld.com/board/readmessage.php?thread=1087651&page=7
http://nypost.com/2015/10/29/al-pacino-totally-lost-over-his-terrible-new-broadway-play/
― I know some Civil War re-enactors you might want to talk to (Eazy), Monday, 2 November 2015 05:43 (nine years ago) link
He would take long walks (he could do that then) through Manhattan plotting out Michael’s transformation from an open-faced war hero to someone darker, more inward, more intense. “I remember not being able to articulate [that arc], even to Francis,” he says. “For the first couple weeks of filming, they were going to let me go.” Coppola saved him, Pacino insists, by moving up the shooting of a key scene — Michael’s killing of Sollozzo and McCluskey at an Italian restaurant: “When they saw that scene, they kept me.”
The weird thing is that the inward Michael Corleone — the role that turned Pacino into a star in one of the greatest films ever made — is the one that’s least emblematic of his work. It’s not how he ever was again! He says it gives him pleasure when I say that, though it touches on the charge that he has often strayed into ham territory, distending and syncopating syllables like a demented bebop artist. Michael consumed him, put him in a kind of straitjacket, forced him to take some of the music out of his voice. And he thinks of his acting as musical. “I’m a tenor,” he says, “and tenors sometimes like to hit the high note.”
He was happy, he says, to make the leaps to Serpico and Dog Day Afternoon: “I didn’t have to see Michael Corleone. I was flying.”
...Here’s what Pacino wants you to take away from the retrospective, especially if you think he’s often the same in every role onscreen — if you always say, “Oh, that’s Al”: “It’s an overview of an acting artist from the Village, really,” he says, and suggests looking at his four gangsters, Michael Corleone, Tony Montana in Scarface, Carlito from Carlito’s Way, and Lefty Ruggiero in Donnie Brasco. They couldn’t be more different. Pacino’s Montana is huge and burns like a filament, a purposely two-dimensional character in a film that the director, Brian De Palma, called a “Brechtian opera” — and Pacino loves how Tony became a cultural icon, however cataclysmic the trajectory. Carlito, on the other hand, is a man who gets out of prison and wants to put his life in order — the opposite of Montana, who manufactures chaos. Lefty is a Mafia middleman, a second-rater striving to rise in the ranks but brought down by a surrogate son who turns out to be an undercover FBI agent.
Sometimes, Pacino says, he goes overboard, sometimes underboard.
“But as Lee Strasberg used to say, ‘Don’t do what you can do. Do what you can’t do. That’s how you learn.’ ”
http://www.vulture.com/2018/03/al-pacino-pacinos-way-retrospective.html
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 7 March 2018 18:45 (six years ago) link
I didn't know he roomed with Martin Sheen!
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 8 March 2018 01:10 (six years ago) link
what a great piece. I love that eternal student quality he has, at least when he talks about acting, the 'I don't know anything about acting' heart of Pacino is what really appeals to me.
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 8 March 2018 01:19 (six years ago) link
I saw Pacino play Marc Antony to Sheen's Brutus in Julius Caesar at the Public Theatre, 1988. It was... not a great production. (Richard Dreyfuss played Cassius.) I did see Pacino in two different stagings of Mamet's American Buffalo, '81 and '83 I think.
He'll be doing a few appearances at the NYC retro, which is unprecedented I think.
https://quadcinema.com/program/pacinos-way/
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 8 March 2018 17:53 (six years ago) link
*You know, I was conflating two different JC productions -- Edward Herrmann played Cassius at the Public Theatre in '88.
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 8 March 2018 17:56 (six years ago) link
For a while, he worked as a messenger at Commentary magazine for the likes of Norman Podhoretz and Susan Sontag. “They just thought I was an energetic, crazy kid, which was great.” he says. “I loved being there, I must say. One of the few places I wasn’t fired from.”
listen, he survived contact with these two – he's a legend.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 8 March 2018 17:59 (six years ago) link
...And Justice for All is quite entertaining for a film that doesn't work at all, and has several flat-out bad sequences. Jeffrey Tambor with hair! Christine Lahti's film debut (she has no chemistry with Al).
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 14:47 (six years ago) link
I’m puzzled at how this new Paterno thing was greenlit. Who’s looking for this
― big C (calstars), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 14:48 (six years ago) link
Important Issues always get the treatment, especially if they have a Tragic [sic] Hero
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 March 2018 14:59 (six years ago) link
Took me a couple of nights to get through Paterno one-and-a-half times, and I still probably drifted through a couple of parts twice. Pacino gives one of his better performances of the past decade-plus. He basically plays Paterno as being in a fog the whole time, mumbling about staying focused on Nebraska next week, and only gradually realizing his complicity in what everyone's trying to get him to pay attention to. Or not--he may realize it from the start, and the fog is just a convenient way to mask that, from others and from himself. Elvis's granddaughter from American Honey is very good too.
― clemenza, Wednesday, 2 May 2018 01:11 (six years ago) link
Watching Dick Tracy for the first time since the 90s.
Kinda fun but it should have been called Prosthesis: The Movie.
Pacino puts in an inspired performance as The Elephant Man.
― When I am afraid, I put my toast in you (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 29 October 2019 05:36 (five years ago) link
80 today! Have a sundae, Al.
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 25 April 2020 15:05 (four years ago) link
read this as HELLO I AM ANAL PACINO POLL
― genital giant (Neanderthal), Saturday, 25 April 2020 15:09 (four years ago) link
if his name were dunk, wouldn't he be dunkpacino, not dunkacino?
― wasdnous (abanana), Saturday, 25 April 2020 15:18 (four years ago) link
ok wtf is dunkaccino
― brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 25 April 2020 21:38 (four years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeLuQQH1OHA
― He is married to Brogmus, Linda. (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 25 April 2020 22:00 (four years ago) link
one of robert smigel's best
― wasdnous (abanana), Sunday, 26 April 2020 00:24 (four years ago) link
PANIC IN NEEDLE PARK is a good film and as clemenza says, intriguingly outside pacino’s usual MO
― mens rea activist (k3vin k.), Sunday, 17 October 2021 22:42 (three years ago) link
Yes, it's an interesting low-key performance; I don't remember anything else about the film except that a dog comes to a bad fate on a ferry.Last night I made a comment on the William Friedkin thread about another Pacino film omitted from this list, Cruising, quoting a review in a book called Movies on TV from 1981:
The basic narrative idea is that our growing discomfort with Pacino's convincing integration into his new environment and our growing fear that he may be developing some homicidal impulses of his own -- both are inextricably linked to our growing exhilaration of our release from fear as Pacino's savvy and power increase. Lurid, brutal, dehumanizing, but it does succeed in searing the audience.
I found Pacino a complete alien presence through the whole film, I certainly wasn't exhilarated at any point (and I don't really think he became savvy at any point either - desensitized, perhaps.
― Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 17 October 2021 22:53 (three years ago) link
Looking at my Gucci, it's about that time: off to see whether Lady Gaga can chew scenery as voraciously as the master this afternoon.
― clemenza, Saturday, 27 November 2021 15:43 (two years ago) link
Not nearly as campy as I was hoping: Jared Leto's performance (felt like I was watching Jeffrey Tambor the whole time) and Gaga/Driver's first sex scene are about it. Just very long and not all that interesting. Pacino's actually pretty good. Except for a vintage Italian cover of "I'm a Believer" by Caterina Caselli, the soundtrack is thoroughly unimaginative (and, when Driver and Gaga get married in 1972, laughingly arbitrary as to placement: "Faith").
― clemenza, Saturday, 27 November 2021 21:59 (two years ago) link
83 years old today
― fair but so uncool beliefs here (Eric H.), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 12:58 (one year ago) link
LOL at this thread for including S1m0ne and Insomnia but not Cruising, Panic in Needle Park, and Looking for Richard.
Carlito's Way obv should've won.
― fair but so uncool beliefs here (Eric H.), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 13:03 (one year ago) link
Getting the shakes now, last call for drinks, bars closing down... Sun's out, where are we going for breakfast? Don't wanna go far. Rough night, tired baby... Tired...
― Cthulhu Diamond Phillips (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 13:31 (one year ago) link
I was flipping through a sale rack of DVDs and came across this from 2014:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1568343/?ref_=nm_flmg_t_14_act
Never heard of it. Pacino, Greta Gerwig, Barry Levinson, Buck Henry...no doubt terrible. It was $5, and I did consider buying it for the sheer weirdness of its existence (and for the brilliantly awkward title, too); didn't, then had second thoughts, then spent the next five minutes trying to find it again and couldn't. Which was pretty weird in itself--there were only about 100 DVDs on the rack.
― clemenza, Friday, 3 May 2024 21:47 (six months ago) link
(The title is not Levinson's--Philip Roth! I have just personally been subjected to the humbling.)
― clemenza, Friday, 3 May 2024 21:58 (six months ago) link