Sunday, July 27, 2025

                                                                 Michael Madsen

                                                                       Part 2

No more Mr. Nice Guy. He made a good living doing exactly that. From the severed ear by Mr. Blonde to burying The Bride alive in Kill Bill 2 he continued to menace the other characters (and often the audience). And yet in real life he was a gentle guy, well liked by his fellow players. He was even a published poet!

In both of the Kill Bill films (2003, 2004, 2006) Madsen is Budd, also known as Sidewinder. The Bride (Uma Thurman) is a former member of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad. She is nearly killed by Bill (David Carradine) and spends most of these movies hacking her way toward revenge against  Bill. Bodies everywhere, body parts as well. This is Quentin Tarrantino’s masterpiece and there’s nothing else quite like it. The 2006 version is actually a merger of the first two. Fans keep hoping for a Volume 3. Quentin says it is not happening. The Sidewinder becomes one of the numberless dead in the second film. 

Mulholland Falls (1996) is about a group of Los Angeles cops who grow tired of known criminals slithering out of punishment and decide to do something. That something is throwing people off the cliff on Mulholland Drive. Michael Madsen is one of the group, playing Eddie Hall. The group operates with the passive protection of the police chief (Bruce Dern). A series of murders and assorted crimes complete the movie until the equivocal finish.

Donnie Brasco (1997) is portrayed by the unlikely Johnny Depp as Joseph Pistone, an undercover FBI agent assigned to infiltrate the Mafia. Which he does, endearing himself to the fading enforcer Lefty Ruggerio (Al Pacino). Michael Madsen is Sonny Black, titular head of one group of mob members. His enemies, a rival Mob gang, makes the mistake of burning down Sonny’s night club. His revenge is unsubtle and complete. Meanwhile, Donnie’s undercover work results in over 200 indictments and he retires to an undisclosed location. 

The Hateful Eight (2015) is another Quentin Tarantino project and like most of his films it is a good story with nobody much to pull for. The title group is a mishmash of outlaws and crooked lawmen forced together by a blizzard into a clothing store. Madsen is Joe Gage, one of the cowboys in the group, by no means the worst. Samuel L.Jackson, Kurt Russell and Jennifer Jason Leigh are also present. Someone poisons the coffee and most of the group is killed. There is a hanging, an arm cut off and various other acts of blood and gore. Well, this is a Tarantino. 

Michael Madsen can also be seen to advantage in Wyatt Earp (1994) as Wyatt’s brother Virgil, and in the very weird Sin City (2005). One of his last roles of note was as Sheriff Hackett in Once Upon A Time In Hollywood (2019). Madsen worked all the time. He logged nine films, none very good, in 2004, the year before his death. 

All of the films in this article are for adults only. 


Sunday, July 20, 2025

                                                                     Michael Madsen


In the latter part of his career, he was almost always the meanest guy in the film. And he was so good at it he sort of got type cast as such. Premiere critic Roger Ebert said “He’s like a really mean Robert DeNiro. He has the kind of menacing screen presence only a few actors achieve.” Michael Madsen left us way too early at 67, leaving behind over 300 appearances in movies and TV shows. Until his turn as the psychotic Mr. Blonde, he was usually just a good middle of the road character actor. If you think these descriptions of the mature Madsen are a little strong, I direct you to his signature role.

Reservoir Dogs (1992). There are lots of bad guys in Quentin Tarantino’s rhinestone in the rough. Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Steve Buscemi and Quentin himself are all on board for the mayhem. But Michael Madsen as Mr. Blonde tops them all. The gang sets out to rob a jewelry store but things go sideways and the police show up. They go their separate ways, winding up at an empty warehouse. They have kidnaped a policeman as a hostage, and they leave him alone with Mr.Blonde. Who promptly tortures the poor guy and cuts his ear off. Bad enough for you? I thought so. This bloodbath of a saga was Quentin’s first feature and sets the tone for his later work. It is not for the squeamish.

Madsen often said that while he made a good living as a totally bad, menacing guy, he sometimes wished for a gentler role. And he actually got one and did a good job with it in Free Willy (1993). 12-year-old Jason is an abandoned kid living on the street when he breaks into the aquarium and bonds with a feisty orca named Willy. Jason is taken in by the kind Greenwood family- Annie (Jayne Atkinson) and Glen ( yep, Michael Madsen). When Jason learns the aquarium’s owner plans to kill Willy for the insurance on him, Jason hatches a crazy plan to return Willy to the open sea. The Greenwoods help him and with Glen’s truck and a hydraulic lift give Jason hope. Finally, Willy must overcome a breakwater to get away and he manages this with Jason’s encouragement by jumping over it. This little film spawned two sequels, a TV series and several video games. None of them are, of course, up to the original. 

In Thelma and Louise (1991) Madsen is a regular guy as the boyfriend of Louise (Susan Sarandon). He tries to help the girls but they are beyond help as they shot a guy outside of a bar. And, of course, wound up driving their getaway car into the Grand Canyon. 

Madsen’s no hero in The Natural (1984) appearing as journeyman baseball player Bump Bailey, completely willing to collude with gamblers and throw a game. Roy Hobbes (Robert Redford) of course refuses and plays on despite death threats. 

In War Games (1983), Diner (1983) and Racing With The Moon (1984) Madsen has meaty, but minor, parts. 

All of the movies in this article except Free Willy are for adults only. Next time, another look at his bad guy roles, of which there are many.




Sunday, July 13, 2025

                                               Oliver- More? Maybe Not

    One of my very favorite movies is Oliver (1968). This is the musical version of Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist, the story of a poor orphan sold into slavery, then rescued by a bunch of juvenile thieves and their boss. He has many adventures as a part of the gang and winds up finding a good home and his true family. The music is sensational and the photography the best. And it won the Oscar for Best Movie. 

On recently watching it yet again it occurred to me that this wonderful film seemed to be almost the end of the road for most of the cast. Very strange!

Oliver is portrayed by the angelic Mark Lester, a wonderful little actor just right as the waif of the title. And yet, although he had plenty of acting jobs, none seemed close to fulfilling the promise of Oliver. Of course, he grew up and that did him no favors. You would have thought that he would have become a big star after playing Oliver. Just wasn’t in the cards. 

The rapscallion Artful Dodger is played to perfection by Jack Wild. He was the leader of the gang of miscreants and a fitting mentor to Oliver. It seemed like a part he was born to play, and he was so good in it that big things should have happened to his career. He died at 54 but his major accomplishment after Oliver was as Jimmy in the children’s TV series HR Puffnstuff. 

The gang of child pickpockets are given a place to live and a job by the villainous Fagin, played to the hilt by Ron Moody. He was only 54 when Oliver was filmed, and he had lots of good jobs both before and after that one. But he never seemed to quite get over the hump and realize the promise of his role in Oliver. 

Shani Wallis shines as Nancy, singing barmaid and sometimes attempted savior of the criminal boys. She has really lousy taste in men though, pairing off with the criminal Bill Sykes. She was a real jewel in the rough in this part and came to a bad end because of her relationship with Sykes. She explains her loyalty to the treacherous Sykes in her solo He Needs Me. And she sings and dances up a storm in the wonderful pub scene. She seemed destined for great things, but alas it just didn’t happen. She had plenty of jobs on up into the 2000s but never seemed to hit it big. 

Harry Secombe had a great part as Mr. Bumble, famously informing all that “if that isn’t true, I’ll eat me head”. Well, he was then and remained a good character actor, never really aspiring to more. 

Oliver Reed, perfectly cast as the glowering Bill Sykes, had loads of work his entire career but never really rose above the Sykes role. Sykes not only forces poor Oliver and his juvenile friends to help him rob people, he also is the neer-do-well and violent boyfriend of Nancy. She meets a sad fate because of her attraction to Sykes.

Well, Carol Reed, who directed this great film, won the directing Oscar for Oliver and helmed lots more good movies. Oh, and my subtitle?  “More” is the word that got Oliver in trouble in the orphanage when he had the temerity to ask for more food.

Sunday, July 6, 2025

                                                                 Dylan and others


I finally got to see A Complete Unknown (2024), the biopic about folk-rock legend Bob Dylan. I liked it, especially the first hour. It is a warts and all look at the meteoric rise of the Nobel Prize winner. Timothee Chalamet is good as Dylan, he looks very much like him and he has the voice down pretty well. Dylan’s decision to ditch folk and wade into rock and roll is convincing and well covered.  Edward Norton is good as the gentle Pete Seeger. Monica Barbaro as Joan Baez and Elle Fanning as Sylvie Russo are also good. So, in a nicely crowded film category, I would put this somewhere in the middle.

For my money, the film that is perhaps the high watermark of this field is Coal Miner’s Daughter (1980). Sissy Spacek (who does her own singing) is simply marvelous as Tammy Wynette, and Tommy Lee Jones does a good job as her husband and manager. Her meteoric rise from coal-mine poverty to queen of the country stars is told accurately and well.

Walk The Line (2005) is one of the best.  Joaquin Phoenix (Johnny Cash) and Reese Witherspoon (June Carter Cash) did their own singing, and are really good at it. Ten minutes in the actors become the singers they’re playing.  That June saved Johnny from sinking into oblivion from drugs and alcohol is well known, and the movie gets it right. The story is a good one and the music is great.

Sweet Dreams (1985), with Jessica Lange as Patsy Cline, is a step slower but still quite good. The dependable Ed Harris is just fine as her ne’er-do-well husband, and little-known Ann Wedgeworth is superb as her mom. That’s Patsy singing and Jessica lip-synching in this one. 

David Carradine can sing up a storm (he starred in the Broadway hit Will Rogers Follies) and does so as legendary Woody Guthrie in Bound For Glory (1976). Woody’s music is very close to the heart and soul of America..He travels the land singing and fighting for the underdog. “This Land Is Your Land” will always be remembered and sung with pride. This movie is gloriously photographed by Haskel Wexler

. The quintessential country singer is, of course, Elvis. Though I guess you can’t really put him in the country (or any) category box. Anyway, to date, nobody has made the defining biopic but it’s not too late. This Is Elvis (1981) isn’t even close; it is more exploitational than entertaining OR true. There are over 30 films either starring or about Elvis, none of which seems to me to get him just right. 

I’m throwing in a film about a country singer who never was because Robert Duvall’s performance in Tender Mercies (1983) is about as good as it gets. It’s not about a real life, but it oughta be!

All of the movies in this column are fine for 12 and up.