Asides

Peter Falk, 1927-2011

By June 24, 2011No Comments

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  • bill says:

    MIKEY AND NICKY is fant­ast­ic. Falk is a legend.

  • Oliver_C says:

    Wings of Desire’ bene­fit­ted immeas­ure­ably from his role. R.I.P.

  • Pinback says:

    Was Falk even cap­able of giv­ing a bad per­form­ance? So much great work, even when the films them­selves were lack­ing. I was going to say I’m sur­prised by how genu­inely sad this makes me feel, but on second thought, it’s no sur­prise at all.

  • Jimmy says:

    A great tal­ent, who will be missed.
    Besides his ultra fine work with John Cassavetes, the man has me on the fuck­ing floor, each and every time I watch, ‘The In-Laws’.
    Another little per­form­ance gem, which now takes on a whole new mean­ing, is in Wim Wenders mag­ni­fi­cent, ‘Wings of Desire’.
    God bless you, Peter Falk.
    And thanks for the magic.

  • warren oates says:

    All the major news orgs are stick­ing with Columbo, which is cool, because I’m a fan too – and I’ve put the “just one more ques­tion” tac­tic to use in my own life. But for me, it’s WINGS OF DESIRE and the Cassavetes films I’ll remem­ber him for. Particularly the scene in A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE when he takes the kids to the beach.

  • lazarus says:

    Sorry, closest to my heart is the man in Murder By Death/The Cheap Detective.

  • otherbill says:

    Always loved Falk in any­thing. I’ll make spe­cial men­tion of CASTLE KEEP- a film I find more fas­cin­at­ing and enjoy­able every time I see it.
    Glenn, as someone who has read a com­ic or two, it may interest/depress you to know that Gene Colan also just passed.

  • jbryant says:

    Yeah, Colan and Falk going so close togeth­er was a big hit, giv­en my comics- and Columbo-loving form­at­ive years. Haven’t fol­lowed com­ics since my ambi­tions shif­ted from com­ic artist to screen­writ­ing in my late teens, but I nev­er get tired of COLUMBO. Netflix streams all the clas­sic epis­odes, and they’ve got A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE and THE BRINK’S JOB too.

  • lipranzer says:

    THE IN-LAWS was a staple in our house (it being, I kid you not, one of the few movies made after 1960 or so that my late fath­er actu­ally liked) when I was grow­ing up, and was of course the movie I watched when I found out Falk had passed away. It has some of the nut­ti­est lines of any com­edy (“they have tsetse flies down here the size of eagles”), Falk gets a lot of them, and his dead­pan style of deliv­ery makes them all the fun­ni­er. R.I.P.

  • jbryant says:

    Correction: Netflix streams only selec­ted COLUMBO epis­odes, not the entire run of the series. Right now, they have 32 episodes.

  • Oliver_C says:

    The funny thing is, if a Columbo com­ic­book had ever exis­ted, then Gene Colan – whose skill at illus­trat­ing chiaroscuro and crumpled drapery nev­er suited super­hero­ics – would have been the nat­ur­al choice to draw it!

  • Paul Duane says:

    The way he deliv­ers the (impro­vised? know­ing Elaine May, prob­ably not) line, “I came as soon as I got your tow­el”, dur­ing the open­ing scenes of Mikey and Nicky, nev­er fails to make me grin. A great, warm, human screen pres­ence. The reas­on I love that film so much is prob­ably because it digs into his warmth and rumpled human­ity and exposes some of the dark­ness beneath it. The final scene, played mostly on his agon­ised face, is one of the most upset­ting moments in American cinema.

  • Lord Henry says:

    MIKEY AND NICKY. WINGS OF DESIRE. A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE. HUSBANDS. COLUMBO. THE BRINK’S JOB.
    RIP, Peter.

  • Hollis Lime says:

    Falk’s per­form­ance in “A Woman Under The Influence” is still my choice for best male lead per­form­ance in movie his­tory. That moment at the end, when Rowlands asks him with such vul­ner­able sin­cer­ity “Do you love me?” and Falk’s one second look of ter­ror right before he says some­thing to the extent of “Hey, help me out with tak­ing this stuff down” is the greatest piece of act­ing I’ve ever seen. How do you do that? How do you dir­ect it? R.I.P. indeed.

  • Partisan says:

    Looking over Falk’s career, I’m struck by how many first rate per­form­ances there were in 1974. Al Pacino, Jack Nicholson and Gene Hackman giv­ing per­haps their best per­form­ances, Falk in A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE, Dustin Hoffman giv­ing a per­fectly respect­able per­form­ance in LENNY: Albert Finney’s Hercule Poirot in MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS does­n’t get the same respect but I think it’s remark­able. And had the Academy not decided that SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE was ineligible, Erland Josephson would had to have been nom­in­ated as well.

  • wwolfe says:

    I’ll men­tion a movie called “Anzio.” From 1968, it stars Robert Mitchum as a war cor­res­pond­ent who is try­ing to fig­ure out why men fight. (That sounds pre­ten­tious, but Mitchum’s under­play­ing helps a lot, as does his dour con­clu­sion: “Because they like it.”) Falk has a sup­port­ing role as an American who does­n’t allow his bad health to keep him away from the excite­ment of battle. The unabashed enthu­si­asm Falk man­ages to have his char­ac­ter express for com­bat has kept this movie in my memory since I saw it a few dec­ades ago on the some TV sta­tion’s Late Show.

  • JC says:

    So, who’s play­ing him in the even­tu­al bio-pic? Mark Ruffalo?

  • jbryant says:

    JC: Kevin Pollak is the only one who could pull it off, because he can hold one of his eyes still while the oth­er moves.