Category Archives: 1-By Laksh

All these articles are from Laksh’s desk

In the Line of Fire

It takes courage to play one’s age or near about on the big screen, especially for a global superstar. Clint Eastwood does it with élan, in ‘The Line of Fire’. He was 60+ when the movie was made and he plays a 50ish character in the film.

There are two ways to play an ageing hero, either ignore the age completely and do one’s regular gig (shoot to kill, song ‘n’ dance if you are an Indian star etc) or completely surrender to the typicality of the age in question to bring in the believability. Clint Eastwood takes the middle path. He brings to the fore the struggles of the age and the overcoming of it in the character of Frank Horrigan, while still displaying the heroics required. This allows him to be a human, and blend those aspects into storytelling.

Mind you, his age always hovers around him, when he is out of breath during the chases, or when he is hesitant about his chances of winning the heart of his fellow officer, but it is the effort that his character puts in and emerging as a winner that makes him a hero eventually. It’s a slow and steady path, much like his career graph over the years. In short he takes the ‘lambi race ka ghoda’ approach and not the effortless gunslinger we are so used to seeing him in the westerns and cop movies. But he still delivers his goods in the end.

This movie also servers a pointer to our Indian superstars who so easily get carried away by Sylvester Stallone kind of Expendables, aka Wild Dogs that allows little variety in storytelling. Instead they should look at Clint Eastwood, Robert Redford and Paul Newman to pick the characters that allow some backstory and sub-plot/s, which creates opportunities for drama, comedy etc, or display the strengths/features the audience associate them with.  More like a diversification showcasing their original traits in a sublime manner or as a theme and weaving the so called ‘new’ around it. Otherwise why should a famous star do it, instead of the part going to a newcomer?

Both ‘In the Line of Fire’ and ‘Wild Dog’ are streaming on Netflix.

Tail Piece 1: My father used say a middle aged actor would look very handsome as an old person, like Sanjeev Kumar in Aandhi etc. The reverse if often very difficult.

Tail Piece 2: The best way to show an old actor in flashback is not to show him at all. Like Sean Connery in ‘The Indiana Jones and the last Crusade’ where he chides the young Jones to speak in Latin.

Robert De Niro and the art of reveal : This Boy’s Life

Streaming on Amazon Prime

It’s amazing how great actors reveal shades of characters and draw you in to their world and to their performance. While the script definetly has to offer such opportunities, it is the actor who has to be in that particular moment of the character arc and portray the same. A bit less or bit extra would ruin the moment and actors like Robert De Niro are perfectly aware of that and bring out the portrayal to near perfection, as he did in ‘This boy’s life ‘.

He plays a regular abusive step father, but what’s really out of the world is how he transforms himself into the final avatar before our own eyes.

In the first scene he shows his conceited nature, his eagerness to please. Later he brings out his inabilities and insecurities to the fore in the rifle shoot scene. And then finally his abusive nature in several scenes and how it is a actually a reflection of his inner demons and his incapability to make a mark for himself in the real world. Even when the scenes are repetitive and you kind of know what to expect, he still manages to hold your attention.

It’s easy to play a straight forward cardboard villain where atrocities are out in the open, but very difficult to play someone where the evil actions are projected from what is subdued and lurking inside. Robert De Niro has shown it again and again in several films like ‘Taxi Driver’, ‘Cape Fear’, ‘Goodfellas’ etc..but in each of these he somehow succeeds in making these performances stand out as unique and authentic. Of course, ably supported by terrific scripts, master league directors and excellent co-actors, like Leanardo De Caprio in ‘This Boy’s Life’.

Tail piece: The final reveal of the character comes in the climax, when Robert De Niro plays the sissy part so well. Infact, it is the sissies who resort to abuse, knowing the other person is too weak to give it back.

Iron Man: Stan Lee

There are several videos on the DVD/Blu-Ray of ‘Iron Man’, that talks about the evolution of the Iron Man character over a period of time. It’s interesting to see the amount of thought that goes into making of comics and even more interesting is the longevity of the characters and their transition to the big screen.

Here’s a video off Youtube.

Tailpiece: One of the main reasons people still buy physical media (apart from quality difference, which is shrinking day by day), is the making and behind the scenes video.