Film Comment

Righteous Fury

ON A 1988 TONIGHT SHOW BROADCAST, JOHNNY Carson asked Kirk Douglas what the actor felt was his best quality, not as an artist but as a man. Douglas, then 71 but looking decades younger, answered with his characteristic blend of soul-searching, candor, and unpredictability: “I think that anger, in a sense, has been a lot of the fuel that’s helped me in whatever I’ve done,” he reflected. “Anger has always been a big part of my life, and it’s always with me, and I think it always will be.” When the slightly bemused host observed that although many people wouldn’t consider that an asset, it’d probably boosted the star more than it had held him back, Douglas heartily concurred.

Hollywood’s last angry man found peace on February 5 at (1956), yearning to be everything to everyone and sublimate his fury into art, stabbing at the canvas in an act of exorcism as much as creation. This is an apt analogy for Douglas’s approach to his craft—blindingly vivid and textured, like the Dutch artist’s paintings, his performances conceal so little that they can alienate, but the raw emotion he brought to the screen is as vast and as roiling as .

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Film Comment

Film Comment6 min read
Declaration of Independence
An Unmarried Woman Paul Mazursky, USA, 1978; The Criterion Collection THERE’S A MOMENT EARLY IN PAUL MAZURSKY’S An Unmarried Women when Erica (Jill Clayburgh) and her gal pals are tippling and pondering 8 x 10 glossies of Bette Davis and Katharine He
Film Comment10 min read
Can Dialectics Break Bricks?
WHAT IF WE LEFT THEIR CONTENTS ASIDE and examined their physical qualities (paper, ink, weight, etc.)?” Camilo Restrepo says in his 2015 documentary short, Impression of a War, as the camera zooms into the warped, oversaturated pages of discarded Col
Film Comment6 min read
An Innocent Abroad
Director Pierre Léon’s gambit is to focus on a single scene, honing in on it with an almost play-by-play fidelity to the book. As such, it’s the most concentrated rendition of the story, but in its own way, curiously expansive. ANY ATTEMPT AT A CINEM

Related Books & Audiobooks