<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://nerve.com/CS/utility/FeedStylesheets/rss.xsl" media="screen"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"><channel><title>The Screengrab : hannibal</title><link>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/hannibal/default.aspx</link><description>Tags: hannibal</description><dc:language>en</dc:language><generator>CommunityServer 2007.1 (Build: 20910.1126)</generator><item><title>Screengrab's Top Guilty Pleasures (Part Five)</title><link>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-top-guilty-pleasures-part-five.aspx</link><pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 23:00:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">bd485f5c-a45b-491f-8e52-c79e7f680fc3:148674</guid><dc:creator>Andrew Osborne</dc:creator><slash:comments>1</slash:comments><wfw:commentRss xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/">http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/rsscomments.aspx?PostID=148674</wfw:commentRss><comments>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-top-guilty-pleasures-part-five.aspx#comments</comments><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size="2"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;u&gt;VADIM RIZOV&amp;#39;S GUILTY PLEASURES:&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/11/16-22/Health.jpg"&gt;&lt;img src="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/11/16-22/Health.jpg" align="right" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;HEALTH (1980) &lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A lot of Altman films have bad reputations, at least among non-believers, but &lt;em&gt;HealtH&lt;/em&gt; was legendarily deemed unreleasable; planned for a release during the 1980 presidential election, it didn&amp;#39;t play anywhere before it was finally let into a grudging run at New York&amp;#39;s Film Forum in 1982; it&amp;#39;s subsequently plunged into obscurity, seen only in extremely rare revivals and occasionally on the Fox Movie Channel. A memorably facile regular charge against Altman is that he did little more than cluster people together and occasionally zoom in; &lt;em&gt;HealtH&lt;/em&gt; basically is that movie, but if you enjoy Altman, it&amp;#39;s a blast. A naked attempt to update &lt;em&gt;Nashville&lt;/em&gt; for the 1980 election, &lt;em&gt;HealtH&lt;/em&gt;&amp;#39;s political commentary is just as weak as that of &lt;em&gt;Nashville&lt;/em&gt;, with less density to cover it up. Kent Jones once wrote that Altman&amp;#39;s &amp;quot;tendency ... to go systematic&amp;quot; almost killed this movie, but if you enjoy that process on top of little more than a string of verbal and visual non sequiturs (my favorite: a guy in a tomato costume — don&amp;#39;t ask — jumping into a pool for no good reason), it&amp;#39;s well worth tracking down. Truly a fans-only effort. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;KILLA SEASON (2006) &lt;br /&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;object height="344" width="425"&gt;&lt;param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/kRktQQx46mE&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;fs=1"&gt;&lt;param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"&gt;&lt;param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"&gt;
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/kRktQQx46mE&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344"&gt;&lt;/embed&gt;&lt;/object&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I guess I&amp;#39;m kind of ridiculously humorless, because the whole idea of &amp;quot;guilty pleasures&amp;quot; strikes me as part of the reason people are getting dumber: it&amp;#39;s easier to recognize bad material, sit back and mock it than try to engage with anything serious and remotely challenging. For some people, the whole genre of &amp;quot;guilty pleasures&amp;quot; takes over entirely from the non-guilty kind and they surrender. Which is fair enough if you&amp;#39;re working a demanding job or have a tough life and don&amp;#39;t really care about movies and just want the laughs. But if you have the time and leisure (unemployment induced or otherwise) to want a guilty pleasure that actively challenges your endurance, say hello to Cam&amp;#39;ron&amp;#39;s directorial debut &lt;em&gt;Killa Season&lt;/em&gt;. Not technically a direct-to-video film (limited tri-state area screenings were scheduled for its release), Cam&amp;#39;ron&amp;#39;s endless ode to gangsta life begins with a back-alley craps game which turns into a man getting whacked over the head with an empty bottle for a minor betting infraction, then everyone cheering as Cam&amp;#39;ron pisses all over him while chanting &amp;quot;No homo.&amp;quot; &lt;em&gt;Killa Season&lt;/em&gt;&amp;#39;s main achievement is being consistently morally depraved and technically incompetent at all times. If the amateur videography and dialogue that makes mumblecore sound like the snappiest film noir you ever saw (Juelz Santana: &amp;quot;They trying to take over the block&amp;quot;; cut to random guy: &amp;quot;Yo, let&amp;#39;s take over the block&amp;quot;) aren&amp;#39;t enough to entice you, stay for levels of moral filth surpassing &lt;em&gt;Salo&lt;/em&gt;. For sheer grossness, the close-ups of coke pellets being shat out by mules are hard to beat, but less-extreme scenes like the ones where Cam&amp;#39;ron spits on a little girl are constantly forthcoming. At well over two hours, &lt;em&gt;Killa Season&lt;/em&gt; will make you question your dedication to unintentional hilarity. Me, I watch it once a year. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;TRANSPORTER 2 (2005)&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;object height="344" width="425"&gt;&lt;param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/wQ4rN4T5Sp0&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;fs=1"&gt;&lt;param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"&gt;&lt;param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"&gt;
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/wQ4rN4T5Sp0&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344"&gt;&lt;/embed&gt;&lt;/object&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;em&gt;Transporter 2&lt;/em&gt; treats real-world physics with less precision than your average Looney Tunes cartoon. Over the course of Louis Leterrer&amp;#39;s film, Jason Statham, when not systematically evading and defeating various goons and hirelings (including a hired assassinatrix who, for good kinky measure, shoots up a hospital in her lingerie — &lt;em&gt;Transporter 2&lt;/em&gt; defeats subtext by being even dumber than you&amp;#39;d expect) — consistently test-drives cars in ways I&amp;#39;ve never seen. My favorite is when, to get rid of a time-bomb on the car&amp;#39;s underside,&amp;nbsp;Statham&amp;#39;s character&amp;nbsp;hooks it on a construction crane as part of a perfect 360 that lands him on the opposite roof &lt;em&gt;just&lt;/em&gt; as the bomb explodes. But there&amp;#39;s also the completely nonsensical climactic fight, where Statham and his Euro-foe (Alessandro Grassman) duke it out, bullets and all, while a plane plummets into the ocean, &lt;em&gt;and even after&lt;/em&gt;. With such sublime visions of human possibility, why carp about the real world?&amp;nbsp; There&amp;#39;s also a smaller pleasure here: anyone fond of the Europudding productions of the &amp;#39;70s — where a bunch of awkwardly accented actors were brought together into an under-written film calculated for nothing so much as maximum exploitation of every country the cast came from — should dig the awkward polyglot cast. When Grassman hisses (in relation to his evil plot to disseminate air toxins) &amp;quot;That&amp;#39;s right. Breathe, my friend, breathe&lt;/em&gt;&amp;quot; — well, if you&amp;#39;re not amused, I can&amp;#39;t help you. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;HANNIBAL (2001)&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;object height="344" width="425"&gt;&lt;param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/noupHDxmUTE&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;fs=1"&gt;&lt;param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"&gt;&lt;param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"&gt;
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/noupHDxmUTE&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344"&gt;&lt;/embed&gt;&lt;/object&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Silence Of The Lambs&lt;/em&gt; is a well-crafted and compelling film, but it&amp;#39;s basically kind of a drag: with every year, the sexual tensions driving Buffalo Bill seem a little less compelling and defensible, and the sexism card seems like more of a time capsule. &lt;em&gt;Hannibal&lt;/em&gt;, on the other hand, is just stupid. Although Ridley Scott&amp;#39;s come a long way since &lt;em&gt;Alien&lt;/em&gt;, it takes a truly brain-dead mind to settle on his unique way of expressing conflict. When Hannibal&amp;#39;s on, the &amp;quot;Goldberg Variations&amp;quot; play; when his nemesis (Gary Oldman) is chewing the screen, the &amp;quot;Blue Danube&amp;quot; plays. And when they meet, &lt;em&gt;they both play at the same time&lt;/em&gt;. &lt;em&gt;Hannibal&lt;/em&gt; is mostly remembered for its final gross-out brain-eating scene, but it offers more than that: if the sexism seems a little dated in &lt;em&gt;Silence&lt;/em&gt;, the leering misogyny of Ray Liotta here is entirely, uh, Liotta-esque, and the constant shots of Florence are pretty without getting all Merchant-Ivory.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Click Here For More Guilt From &lt;a class="" href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-top-guilty-pleasures-part-one.aspx"&gt;Andrew Osborne&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a class="" href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-top-guilty-pleasures-part-two.aspx"&gt;Scott Von Doviak&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a class="" href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-top-guilty-pleasures-part-three.aspx"&gt;Leonard Pierce&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a class="" href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-top-guilty-pleasures-part-four.aspx"&gt;Hayden Childs&lt;/a&gt; &amp;amp; &lt;a class="" href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/11/20/screengrab-s-guilty-pleasures-part-six.aspx"&gt;Sarah Clyne Sundberg&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;em&gt;Contributor: Vadim Rizov&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;img src="http://nerve.com/CS/aggbug.aspx?PostID=148674" width="1" height="1"&gt;</description><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/julianne+moore/default.aspx">julianne moore</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/vadim+rizov/default.aspx">vadim rizov</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/gary+oldman/default.aspx">gary oldman</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/ridley+scott/default.aspx">ridley scott</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/jason+statham/default.aspx">jason statham</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/robert+altman/default.aspx">robert altman</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/ray+liotta/default.aspx">ray liotta</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/nashville/default.aspx">nashville</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/anthony+hopkins/default.aspx">anthony hopkins</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/hannibal/default.aspx">hannibal</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/Andrew+Osborne/default.aspx">Andrew Osborne</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/cam_2700_ron/default.aspx">cam'ron</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/health/default.aspx">health</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/transporter+2/default.aspx">transporter 2</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/killa+season/default.aspx">killa season</category></item><item><title>The Albert Popwell Collection</title><link>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/06/06/the-albert-popwell-collection.aspx</link><pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 17:00:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">bd485f5c-a45b-491f-8e52-c79e7f680fc3:99325</guid><dc:creator>Phil Nugent</dc:creator><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><wfw:commentRss xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/">http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/rsscomments.aspx?PostID=99325</wfw:commentRss><comments>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/06/06/the-albert-popwell-collection.aspx#comments</comments><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size="2"&gt;
&lt;object height="344" width="425"&gt;&lt;param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/1-0BVT4cqGY&amp;amp;hl=en"&gt;
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/1-0BVT4cqGY&amp;amp;hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="344" width="425"&gt;&lt;/object&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The release this week of &lt;a href="http://www.nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/06/03/dvd-digest-for-june-3-2008.aspx"&gt;all five &amp;quot;Dirty Harry&amp;quot; movies starring Clint Eastwood&lt;/a&gt; on DVD and Blu-ray gives fans the chance to settle in for a long weekend spent admiring the charismatic intensity and skillful range of a familiar but sometimes underappreciated American actor--Albert Popwell. Popwell, who died in 1999, goes way back in the &lt;i&gt;Dirty Harry&lt;/i&gt; franchise: he has a small role as a hippie in the movie that many see as a precursor to the Harry Callahan character (as it was molded by Eastwood and director Don Siegel in the 1971 &lt;i&gt;Dirty Harry&lt;/i&gt;) and TV&amp;#39;s &lt;i&gt;McCloud&lt;/i&gt; to boot: the 1968 &lt;i&gt;Coogan&amp;#39;s Bluff&lt;/i&gt;. In that film, the first collaboration between Siegel and Eastwood--they&amp;#39;d later team up for &lt;i&gt;The Beguiled, Two Mules for Sister Sara,&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Escape from Acatraz&lt;/i&gt;--Eastwood plays a shitkicker cop from Arizona who hits New York City at the height of the counterculture era to track down an escaped hood and inspires everyone&amp;#39;s reluctant admiration for the effectiveness of his uncivilized approach enforcement. Popwell would go on to appear in a small but key role in &lt;i&gt;Dirty Harry&lt;/i&gt; and return, in a different role each time, in the first three of its four sequels. Grady Hendrix recently noted that Popwell &amp;quot;&lt;a href="http://www.nysun.com/arts/dirty-harry-uses-the-force/79124/"&gt;twice the actor Mr. Eastwood is in the series&lt;/a&gt;;&amp;quot; his repeat appearances also serve as a handy guide to what possibilities were open--and closed--to talented African-American character actors in movies of the period. (I don&amp;#39;t necessarily mean to imply that things have changed a whole hell of a lot.) &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In &lt;i&gt;Dirty Harry&lt;/i&gt;, Popwell has perhaps the movie&amp;#39;s most memorable scene, albeit one that he has to spend lying on the sidewalk with a gun in his face. He plays the survivor of a bank robbery that interrupts Harry&amp;#39;s lunch. A crackerjack action set piece peerlessly directed by Siegel in his knuckle-cracking prime, it establishes Harry&amp;#39;s unearthly cool and mastery of the violent approach to crime-solving; he figures out what&amp;#39;s going from one look at the getaway car and proceeds to foil the robbers by shooting their car. He then proceeds to fake out Popwell, who&amp;#39;s lying within reach of his gun, by taunting him with the famous speech about just what Harry&amp;#39;s gun could do to him if he had any bullets left, which he may or may not--&amp;quot;Do you feel lucky?&amp;quot; After backing down, Popwell calls out to the departing Harry in raspy-voiced desperation--&amp;quot;I gots to know&amp;quot; he says, with as much dignity as imaginable under the circumstances--and Harry points the gun in his face, pulls the trigger--&lt;i&gt;click!&lt;/i&gt;--then walks away chuckling. The audience is meant to cheer Harry for not only defeating the fallen criminal but messing with his head and rubbing his face in it, and most of them do cheer, but Siegel&amp;#39;s inclusion of a small grace note--a close-up of Popwell muttering, &amp;quot;Son of a bitch&amp;quot; as Harry walks away--can perhaps be taken as the director&amp;#39;s covert acknowledgment that, for all his bitching and moaning about the things he&amp;#39;s forced to do to compensate for the ineffectual lily-livered politicians and other liberals who would shackle the lawgiver, there&amp;#39;s a big part of Harry that enjoys his job way too much. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There are no such grace notes in Popwell&amp;#39;s flashy, repulsive scene in 1973&amp;#39;s &lt;i&gt;Magnum Force&lt;/i&gt;; he plays a pimp who brutally murders a hooker. But by then, grace notes in the &amp;quot;Dirty Harry&amp;quot; franchise were already getting to be few and far between. (&lt;i&gt;Magnum Force&lt;/i&gt; is itself conceived as a raised middle finger to those who criticized the first film as a reactionary endorsement of vigilante police power. It pits craggy old Harry against a secret police death squad consisting of fresh-faced young up-and-comers--Robert Urich, Tim Matheson, David Soul--and their fearless leader, Hal Holbrook.) In 1976&amp;#39;s &lt;i&gt;The Enforcer&lt;/i&gt;, made in the wake of the SLA kidnapping of Patricia Hearst and other manifestions of the last insane, dying ripples of &amp;quot;revolutionary&amp;quot; counterculture politics, Popwell turns up as &amp;quot;Mustapha&amp;quot;, a troubled-looking black militant who slips Harry some information that will help him bring down the &amp;quot;People&amp;#39;s Revolutionary Strike Force&amp;quot;, a bunch of pimps and hookers posing as a terrorist cell. (Like the Mothers of Invention, they&amp;#39;re only in it for the money.) However we&amp;#39;re meant to view his character, he does again manage to suggest a much deeper and more complicated range of thought and emotion than Harry. Popwell made the full jump to good guy in 1983&amp;#39;s &lt;i&gt;Sudden Impact&lt;/i&gt;, the only film in the series directed by Eastwood himself. By now, the tensions of the sixties are fully submerged and the movie is in total action-cartoon mode. There isn&amp;#39;t much Popwell can do to leaven it, but he does get more screen time than ever before. He plays Harry&amp;#39;s partner, which is the series equivalent to being the drummer in Spinal Tap. It is a role traditionally assigned to representatives of &amp;quot;minority groups&amp;quot;, such as the Hispanic rookie detective played by Reni Santoni in &lt;i&gt;Dirty Harry&lt;/i&gt; and the woman cop played by Tyne Daly in &lt;i&gt;The Enforcer&lt;/i&gt;, so that Harry can show that for all his angry-white-male bluster, he can respect and work with the unwhite and the unmale when they prove to him that they have the right stuff. Paradoxically, they invariably prove it by getting taken out of the action by getting injured or killed, so that Harry can also show that only he is tough enough to single-handedly prevail in the end. Popwell&amp;#39;s role does not break the cycle. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Popwell&amp;#39;s career was hardly limited to his association with Clint Eastwood. He was a very active presence in TV, appeared in Siegel&amp;#39;s &lt;i&gt;Charley Varrick&lt;/i&gt;, and left a fond impression among fans of family-blacksploitation films with his role as Matthew Johnson, who, with his brother Melvin (Caro Kenyatta), lent their martial-arts skills to the efforts to keep heroin out of the neighborhood in two films starring the late Tamara Dobson as the amazon avenger Cleopatra Jones. But he deserves to be remembered for being to Dirty Harry what Frankie Faisan has been to Hannibal Lector. Faison, it will be remembered, appeared in all the movies featuring everyone&amp;#39;s favorite cannibal psychiatrist--&lt;i&gt;Manhunter, The Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal&lt;/i&gt;, and &lt;i&gt;Red Dragon&lt;/i&gt;--up until the more recent and less successful &lt;i&gt;Hannibal Rising.&lt;/i&gt; It would be nice to surmise that Popwell&amp;#39;s absence from the last Dirty Harry movie, &lt;i&gt;The Dead Pool&lt;/i&gt;, was closely connected to that film&amp;#39;s disappointing returns, but it did have, &lt;i&gt;mmmmmmmmmmm&lt;/i&gt;, other problems. Eastwood himself was 58 at the time, and the appearance of this box set, twenty years later, can probably be taken as a declaration, should anyone have been in doubt about it before now, that we have indeed seen the last of Harry Callahan and his big phallic killing device. Eastwood may not be the master filmmaker and great actor that a number of critics have insisted on taking him for in his dotage, but, give him a little credit: he&amp;#39;s less shameless than Sylvester Stallone.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;img src="http://nerve.com/CS/aggbug.aspx?PostID=99325" width="1" height="1"&gt;</description><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/phil+nugent/default.aspx">phil nugent</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/don+siegel/default.aspx">don siegel</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/grady+hendrix/default.aspx">grady hendrix</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/sylvester+stallone/default.aspx">sylvester stallone</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/dirty+harry/default.aspx">dirty harry</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/clint+eastwood/default.aspx">clint eastwood</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/manhunter/default.aspx">manhunter</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+silence+of+the+lambs/default.aspx">the silence of the lambs</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/red+dragon/default.aspx">red dragon</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/hannibal/default.aspx">hannibal</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+dead+pool/default.aspx">the dead pool</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/cleopatra+jones/default.aspx">cleopatra jones</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/sudden+impact/default.aspx">sudden impact</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/albert+popwell/default.aspx">albert popwell</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/reni+santoni/default.aspx">reni santoni</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/escape+from+alcatraz/default.aspx">escape from alcatraz</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/coogan_2700_s+bluff/default.aspx">coogan's bluff</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/frankie+faisan/default.aspx">frankie faisan</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/tyne+daly/default.aspx">tyne daly</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/chaley+varrick/default.aspx">chaley varrick</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/caro+kanyatta/default.aspx">caro kanyatta</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/tamara+dobson/default.aspx">tamara dobson</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/two+mules+for+sister+sara/default.aspx">two mules for sister sara</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+enforcer/default.aspx">the enforcer</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+beguiled/default.aspx">the beguiled</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/magnum+force/default.aspx">magnum force</category></item><item><title>The 10 Greatest Psychiatrists in Movie History, Part 1</title><link>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/02/28/the-10-greatest-psychiatrists-in-movie-history-part-1.aspx</link><pubDate>Thu, 28 Feb 2008 21:00:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">bd485f5c-a45b-491f-8e52-c79e7f680fc3:74765</guid><dc:creator>Phil Nugent</dc:creator><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><wfw:commentRss xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/">http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/rsscomments.aspx?PostID=74765</wfw:commentRss><comments>http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/02/28/the-10-greatest-psychiatrists-in-movie-history-part-1.aspx#comments</comments><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size="2"&gt;Cinema, a form that makes it possible for the artist to actually devise and stage his own dreams and record them for posterity, has always had a fascination with psychiatrists, explorers of the mind who endeavor to delve into their patients&amp;#39; subconscious for clues as to how to better understand and regulate their conscious behavior. The new HBO series &lt;i&gt;In Treatment&lt;/i&gt; is remarkable for how accurately it captures the droning frustration of a session with a typical modern shrink, whose concern that he not appear judgemental or nonobjective leaves him with little to do but sit there grunting noncommittally while the person who&amp;#39;s paying for his time sits there tearing his hair out. But it wasn&amp;#39;t always that way. As depicted in movies, psychiatry was once a dashing profession, inhabited by risk takers who jumped into their patients&amp;#39; lives with both feet and made a real effort to make a difference. More often than not, the differences they made were scary, destructive, and hair-raising. Still, it must have been nice for their patients to know that they were sharing their problems with someone who cared. Such as these worthies: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;b&gt;1. DR. CALIGARI (WERNER KRAUSE)&lt;/b&gt; in &lt;b&gt;THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI (1919)&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;object height="355" width="425"&gt;&lt;param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/F2zNJXMOIy4"&gt;&lt;param name="wmode" value="transparent"&gt;
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/F2zNJXMOIy4" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" height="355" width="425"&gt;&lt;/object&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dr. Caligari (Werner Krause) runs the laughing academy in the picturesque German mountain village of Holstenwall. As the film&amp;#39;s narrator tells it, Caligari has been using hypnotism to control his charge Cesare (Conrad Veidt), and has also been trying to help the patient to find a place for himself in society by exhibiting him at the local geek show. When Caligari invites members of the crowd to test Cesare&amp;#39;s omniscient powers by asking him an unanswerable question, the narrator&amp;#39;s friend, being German, asks him not when &lt;i&gt;Chinese Democracy&lt;/i&gt; is going to be finished but when he, the friend, will die. Cesare tells him that he will die the next dawn, and because the doctor has taught him that words must be backed up by action, makes sure that the prophecy comes true by tracking the fellow down and throttling him to meet the deadline. At the end of the movie, all this is revealed to a delusional fantasy of the narrator&amp;#39;s, who is in fact an inmate in the asylum where Caligari really is chief of staff. The film ends with Caligari&amp;#39;s happy announcement that, now that the narrator has gone to the trouble of envisioning a landmark work in the history of silent German Expressionist cinema, Caligari now has the key to his treatment. Maybe if a few more of the people in analysis had cared a little more about breaking new ground cinematically, the success rate among those in therapy would skyrocket. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;b&gt;2. DR. YEN LO (KHIGH DHIEGH)&lt;/b&gt; in &lt;b&gt;THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE (1962)&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/02/23-End%20of%20Month/rogues-gallery_dhiegh.jpg"&gt;&lt;img src="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/02/23-End%20of%20Month/rogues-gallery_dhiegh.jpg" align="right" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;At first glance, Dr. Yen Lo seems to be the ideal psychiatrist. He has a wife he dotes on, an easy bedside manner, an encyclopedic knowledge of the latest medical and behavioral techniques, and a quick wit. “Always with humor!”, he tells a colleague, with a beaming smile on his Chinese face. It’s only when you realize that the joke he’s just told his nervous compatriot involves using him as the test dummy on which to unleash his newly reprogrammed assassin, and that his gregarious, friendly bedside manner only comes after he has completely rewired your brain and turned you into a remorseless killer that the bloom starts to come off the rose. And sooner or later, you’re going to realize that he may have gotten you to lose weight and play a mean game of solitaire, but he’s also gotten you hooked on yak dung cigarettes. To sum up, Dr. Yen Lo isn’t the kind of doctor who is going to get a lot of referrals through the HMO. But he is, as played by omnipresent character actor Khigh Dhiegh in the immortal 1962 political thriller &lt;i&gt;The Manchurian Candidate&lt;/i&gt;, the man who made an unstoppable, relentless killer out of war hero Raymond Shaw, and one of the most sinister psychiatrists in cinematic history. (Dhiegh specialized in portraying menacing Chinese – he was also Wo Fat on &lt;i&gt;Hawaii Five-0&lt;/i&gt; – but he was actually not east Asian at all, but of North African Arab origin.) It’s his jolly, disarming manner that makes his aptitude at destroying innocent men’s minds so particularly monstrous; and worst of all, he gets off scot-free in a movie soaked with bloody murder: the last time we see him, he’s tottering off to Macy’s to tick some items off of Madame Lo’s shopping list. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;b&gt;3. DR. LOUIS JUDD (TOM CONWAY)&lt;/b&gt; in &lt;b&gt;CAT PEOPLE (1942)&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/02/23-End%20of%20Month/tom-conway-1949-cheated-law_3x4.jpg"&gt;&lt;img src="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/02/23-End%20of%20Month/tom-conway-1949-cheated-law_3x4.jpg" align="right" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;When you think about how many overpaid chin-scratchers are using their psychiatry degrees as a license to tap into the bank accounts of people who have abandonment issues or wished that daddy had hugged them more, you have to feel a certain admiration for Dr. Louis Judd (Tom Conway), who bravely agreed to take on the more difficult case of a deeply troubled young woman (Simone Simon) who was reluctant to consummate her marriage because she was convinced that if she did, she would turn into a sharp-clawed, fang-toothed jungle cat, with dire effects for any naked man who happened to be embracing her at the time. Dr. Judd&amp;#39;s breakthrough method of treatment for her condition--i.e., putting the moves on her--remains controversial; some feel that he violated the boundaries of the doctor-patient relationship, while others, pointing out that it was the patient&amp;#39;s husband who retained him, argue that anyone who puts his confused, hot young wife in the hands of a guy with a pencil line mustache and a family resemblance to George Sanders is begging for whatever happens. In the end, Dr. Judd surprised himself, if no one else, by establishing that if anyone hit on his patient hard enough she really &lt;i&gt;would&lt;/i&gt; turn into a murderous jungle cat, and in his last moments on Earth he wrapped up the case by shooting his client, thus making himself a hero figure to therapists everywhere. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;b&gt;4. COL. VINCENT KANE (STACY KEACH)&lt;/b&gt; in &lt;b&gt;THE NINTH CONFIGURATION (1980)&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;object height="355" width="425"&gt;&lt;param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Orx6ou1OUKs&amp;amp;rel=1"&gt;&lt;param name="wmode" value="transparent"&gt;
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Orx6ou1OUKs&amp;amp;rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" height="355" width="425"&gt;&lt;/object&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“I’m telling you, Billy, Kane is Gregory Peck in &lt;i&gt;Spellbound&lt;/i&gt;,” says Lt. Frank Reno (who is adapting Shakespeare’s plays for dogs) to the depressed astronaut Captain Billy Cutshaw. “It’s just like that movie. He comes to take over the nuthouse and he’s nuts himself.” Cutshaw responds to this news by requesting that Reno drop out of a tree like an overripe mango, but the lieutenant is right: Col. Vincent Kane, the Marine Corps psychiatrist sent to take charge of an insane asylum staffed by disturbed Vietnam veterans, is in fact the craziest man in the joint. The actual extent of his insanity is slowly teased out over the course of this gripping, underrated movie written and directed by &lt;i&gt;The Exorcist&lt;/i&gt;’s William Peter Blatty; it begins as a surreal, endlessly quotable comedy, and, as Kane’s madness is revealed, becomes a dark, deep philosophical drama. Colonel Kane is played by Stacy Keach in what can only be described as the role of a lifetime, and he meets it with gusto. At first, he’s full of quiet compassion and boundless sympathy, but with the right provocations and the slightest circumstance, he’s fully transformed into the raging, lethal “Killer” Kane. One of his most memorable scenes comes when his subordinate, Major Groper, cavils at having to play dress-up as part of the inmates’ role-playing therapy; demanding love and compassion from Groper, Kane morphs, werewolf-like, from an impossibly kindly shrink to a seething, hissing, screaming maniac of a Marine drill instructor who’d just as soon see someone dead as insubordinate. Groper, by the way, gets one of the movie’s funniest lines earlier in the movie: warning the men – who he considers to be goldbricking fakers – that the asylum will soon be taken over by the formidable Kane, he hollers: “Too bad, boys! Tough shit! Because guess who’s coming? A PSYCHIATRIST! The best! The best in uniform! The greatest fucking psychiatrist since Jung!” Naturally, he pronounces it with a hard J. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;b&gt;5. DR. HANNIBAL LECTER (BRIAN COX)&lt;/b&gt; in &lt;b&gt;MANHUNTER&lt;/b&gt; (1986) and &lt;b&gt;ANTHONY HOPKINS&lt;/b&gt; in &lt;b&gt;THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS (1991)&lt;/b&gt;, &lt;b&gt;HANNIBAL (2001)&lt;/b&gt;, and &lt;b&gt;RED DRAGON (2002)&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/02/23-End%20of%20Month/180px-Lecktor02.jpg"&gt;&lt;img src="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/2008/02/23-End%20of%20Month/180px-Lecktor02.jpg" align="right" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;In many ways, this is an atypical entry for this list, as in the four films set during Dr. Hannibal Lecter&amp;#39;s adult life, we almost never actually see him working with patients. Yet I doubt anyone would contest his inclusion here. Formidably intelligent, impossibly cultured, and certifiably wacko, Lecter&amp;#39;s appetites take him all over the world and into many realms of human experience. Yet even more than his taste for human flesh, what makes him truly scary is the way he uses that great big brain of his to toy with those he perceives as being beneath him. As a character explains in &lt;i&gt;Hannibal&lt;/i&gt;, Lecter preys on what he calls &amp;quot;the rude,&amp;quot; and his most severe mind games are reserved for those who offend his cultivated sensibilities. Think of the way he talks Multiple Miggs into swallowing his own tongue after Miggs insults Clarice. Or the way he drugs Mason Verger and convinces him to carve up his own face. But even when he&amp;#39;s dealing with people he respects more, he can&amp;#39;t help himself&amp;nbsp;— consider his conversations with Clarice, in which he drops hints about the case she&amp;#39;s working on, but in the form of riddles rather than as straightforward clues. One almost feels sorry for him after a while —&amp;nbsp;after all, what else does he have left to enjoy in life &lt;i&gt;but&lt;/i&gt; his mind? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;— &lt;i&gt;Paul Clark&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Phil Nugent&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Leonard Pierce&lt;/i&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;a href="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/2008/02/28/the-10-greatest-psychiatrists-in-movie-history-part-2.aspx" class=""&gt;Click here for Part 2.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/i&gt; &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;img src="http://nerve.com/CS/aggbug.aspx?PostID=74765" width="1" height="1"&gt;</description><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/leonard+pierce/default.aspx">leonard pierce</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/spellbound/default.aspx">spellbound</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/phil+nugent/default.aspx">phil nugent</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/paul+clark/default.aspx">paul clark</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/brian+cox/default.aspx">brian cox</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+ninth+configuration/default.aspx">the ninth configuration</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/william+peter+blatty/default.aspx">william peter blatty</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+exorcist/default.aspx">the exorcist</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+manchurian+candidate/default.aspx">the manchurian candidate</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/gregory+peck/default.aspx">gregory peck</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/hawaii+five-o/default.aspx">hawaii five-o</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/manhunter/default.aspx">manhunter</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+silence+of+the+lambs/default.aspx">the silence of the lambs</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/anthony+hopkins/default.aspx">anthony hopkins</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/khigh+dheigh/default.aspx">khigh dheigh</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/simone+simon/default.aspx">simone simon</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/george+sanders/default.aspx">george sanders</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/cat+people/default.aspx">cat people</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/the+cabinet+of+dr.+caligari/default.aspx">the cabinet of dr. caligari</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/tom+conway/default.aspx">tom conway</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/conrad+veidt/default.aspx">conrad veidt</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/red+dragon/default.aspx">red dragon</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/in+treatment/default.aspx">in treatment</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/hannibal/default.aspx">hannibal</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/stacy+keach/default.aspx">stacy keach</category><category domain="http://nerve.com/CS/blogs/screengrab/archive/tags/werner+krause/default.aspx">werner krause</category></item></channel></rss>