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Search resuls for: "Friedkin’s"


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Lance Reddick, Dale Dye and Kiefer Sutherland Photo: Paramount+/SHOWTIMEThe strawberries are still missing; the steel balls continue rolling nervously around in Captain Queeg’s sea-weathered mitts. And Showtime’s “The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial” is yet another revisiting of the Herman Wouk courtroom saga. A deliberately spare, stripped-down take on the stage adaptation of the novel, it is also the last directorial effort of William Friedkin , who died in August. Those looking to make absolute sense of Friedkin’s involvement might reflect not on the director’s more lavishly imagined and celebrated films—“The Exorcist” or “The French Connection”—but on those that dealt with gray areas of morality and law: “To Live and Die in L.A.,” “Rules of Engagement” and even “Cruising.”
Persons: Lance Reddick, Dale Dye, Kiefer Sutherland, , , Herman Wouk, William Friedkin Organizations: Paramount Locations: Queeg’s, L.A
It is one of those strange accidents of history that the best film ever made about the Roman Catholic Church was directed by a Jewish agnostic. When it came out, “The Exorcist” didn’t just shock audiences with lurid scenes of projectile vomiting and spinning heads. It also forced them to acknowledge a tension, most acutely felt in the Catholic Church but omnipresent in Western society, that had grown between two rival conceptions of religion. Is religion an expression of a transcendent moral and metaphysical order? “The Exorcist” came down on the side of tradition.
Persons: William Friedkin, , Friedkin Organizations: Roman Catholic Church, Catholic Church, Catholic, Vatican Council
William Friedkin, ‘Exorcist’ director, dead at 87
  + stars: | 2023-08-07 | by ( Dan Heching | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +3 min
CNN —William Friedkin, director of iconic 1970s films including “The French Connection” and “The Exorcist,” has died, his wife Sherry Lansing, the former CEO of Paramount Pictures, told The Hollywood Reporter on Monday. Friedkin won the Oscar for best director for “French Connection” in 1972, going on to be nominated for the same trophy again two years later for occult horror “Exorcist,” the genre-defying hit that racked up ten nominations and two statuettes. Curiously, Friedkin once told Cinephilia Beyond that his original intention wasn’t even to make a horror film with “The Exorcist.”“I recognize that audiences for generations have considered it a horror film,” he observed. “I won’t deny that, but when I set out to make it, the writer and I never had any concept of it as a horror film. He is survived by his wife, along with two sons, Jackson and Cedric Friedkin.
Persons: William Friedkin, , Sherry Lansing, Friedkin, Oscar, Friedkin’s, , Al Pacino, Willem Dafoe, Ashley Judd, Michael Shannon, Harry Connick Jr, Tommy Lee Jones, Samuel L, Jackson, Jade, David Caruso, Linda Fiorentino, Amort, Kiefer Sutherland, Jason Clarke, Jake Lacy, William Peter Blatty –, Ellen Burstyn, Cinephilia, Exorcist’s, Stanley Kubrick, Arthur Penn, Mike Nichols, ’ ” Friedkin, Jeanne Moreau, Lesley, Anne Down, Kelly Lange, Lansing, Cedric Friedkin Organizations: CNN, Paramount Pictures, Hollywood, NPR Locations: L.A, , French, British
Adapted from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Herman Wouk, “The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial” follows the trial of a naval officer (played by Jake Lacy) who is accused of leading a mutiny against his unstable commander (Kiefer Sutherland). The story was first adapted for the 1954 film “The Caine Mutiny,” which was nominated for seven Oscars including best picture. Though that film and Wouk’s novel take place during World War II, Friedkin contemporized the story and relocated the action to the Persian Gulf. “The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial” is Friedkin’s 20th narrative film and his first since 2011’s “Killer Joe,” which starred Matthew McConaughey. In the interim, Friedkin directed a documentary, “The Devil and Father Amorth,” about a purported real-life exorcism.
Persons: William Friedkin, Friedkin, , , Herman Wouk, Jake Lacy, Kiefer Sutherland, Joe, Matthew McConaughey, Amorth Organizations: Paramount, Showtime, Venice Film Locations: Venice, Persian
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