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 The Stunt Man 

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 The Stunt Man 
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Keeping it Light
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Joined: Wed Apr 08, 2015 8:06 am
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Location: Bright Falls
Post The Stunt Man
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The Stunt Man is a 1980 American satirical psychological black comedy film starring Peter O'Toole, Steve Railsback and Barbara Hershey, and directed by Richard Rush. The film was adapted by Lawrence B. Marcus and Rush from the 1970 novel by Paul Brodeur. It tells the story of a young fugitive who hides as a stunt double on the set of a World War I movie whose charismatic director will do seemingly anything for the sake of his art. The line between illusion and reality is blurred as scenes from the inner movie cut seamlessly to "real life" and vice versa. There are examples of "movie magic", where a scene of wartime carnage is revealed as just stunt men and props, and where a shot of a crying woman becomes, with scenery, props and soundtrack, a portrait of a grieving widow at a Nazi rally. The protagonist begins to doubt everything he sees and hears, and at the end is faced with real danger when a stunt seems to go wrong.

It was nominated for three Academy Awards: Best Actor in a Leading Role (Peter O'Toole), Best Director (Richard Rush), and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium. However, due to its limited release, it never earned much attention from audiences at large. As O'Toole remarked in a DVD audio commentary, "The film wasn't released. It escaped." The film has since developed a cult following.


Wed Jun 18, 2025 3:44 pm
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The Kramer
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Joined: Sat Oct 23, 2004 11:36 am
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Location: Classified
Post Re: The Stunt Man
The Stunt Man ought to be watched by everyone if only for the outrageous performance by Peter O Toole as a director who traps a runaway fugitive into his film, making him do increasing dangerous stunts, question reality and dig into his wartime memories to rewrite the movie on the fly. Every one else on the film is all in, with a near cultish devotion to the director, and even though the main character (I forgot his name) is the only one who can't literally walk away, he can try to take pride in not being broken by a tyrannical megalomaniac. A brilliant film for any generation. One could even wonder how much of an influence this had on Tom Cruise as he became the crazy director and the stunt man pushed to his limits all in one.

9/10


Wed Jun 18, 2025 5:15 pm
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