Gene Hackman
Part 3
Coming now to the middle part of Gene Hackman’s storied career. Plenty of good ones in this chapter.
A Bridge Too Far (1977) is, at nearly three hours, really long. One critic said it should have been title “A Film Too Long”. Anyway, it’s based on the true story of the Allies offensive, Operation Market Garden, in World War II. Allied forces are dropped far into the occupied Netherlands. Their mission is to capture the Arnheim Bridge, the only route for the Germans to get out of Holland. Things go badly from the start and the attack totally fails Gene Hackman portrays the Polish General Sosabowski whose attempt to bail out the surrounded Allies is too late.
Gene Hackman received lots of boos and hisses for his performance as Lex Luthor, sworn enemy of Superman (1978). This is the one with Christopher Reeve, and probably the best. Luthor plans to drop a missile on the San Andreas fault, blowing the West apart and making his desert property beach front. Really! Anyway his plans are thwarted by Superman, who reverses time by spinning the world the other way and stopping the missiles. Superman II (1980) is even crazier, and more fun. Hackman again is Lex Luthor and this time is out to destroy Superman and America. Superman uses his special powers (!) to stop the bad guys and correct the memories of those who know his secret, Great stuff! Gene is back in Number 4 but it is a barking dog!
Reds (1981) won a boatload of awards as the almost true story of the Russian Revolution and its aftermath. Warren Beatty directs and plays journalist John Reed, at first a big fan of the Bolsheviks and later not so much. Gene Hackman has a couple of scenes as Pete Van Wherry, Reed’s editor and not much in favor of the Russkis. But he puts up with Reed for a while and nails his two scenes.
It’s hard to tell the bad guys without a program in Under Fire (1983) as journalists from the West attempt to cover the civil war in Nicaragua. Gene Hackman is on board as Alex Grazier, a famous war correspondent. He gets perhaps too close to the action but, hey, it’s a job. Ed Harris, Nick Nolte and Joanna Cassidy are on hand as his fellow journalists, trying their best to make the best of a cluster&%#@.
You want a great basketball movie, or how about one where the little guy triumphs against impossible odds? Okay, we’ve got Hoosiers (1986). In Indiana, when the high school basketball playoffs start, there are no size divisions- just teams. Gene Hackman is the coach of little Hickory, which most of the time can’t scrimmage because it doesn’t have enough players. But Coach Norman knows what he’s doing and after some flack from the town people, the team begins to rise though the playoffs, against schools 10 times their size. Dennis Hopper is on board as the alcoholic pal of Norman, who really knows basketball. With the score tied in the finals, Norman devises a play with superstar Jimmy as a decoy. But Jimmy just says “I’ll maker it”. And he does!
All of the movies in this article are available somewhere. All are for grown-ups.