Home » Actor Gene Hackman dies at 95

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Actor Gene Hackman dies at 95 — 12 Comments

  1. ‘Hoosiers’ is the greatest sports movie ever and his Norman Dale is the personification of every great old school coach ever.

  2. I can also think of several scenarios for this also, which don’t involve foul play. It’s kind of odd, though – that they didn’t seem to have a regular housekeeper, or staff … it was apparently the yard maintenance guys who discovered the bodies.

    He was a most excellent actor, though. I think the curious thing about his success was that he was an absolutely ordinary-looking guy. He was so believable in all those ‘every-day, ordinary man’ roles because of that absolute ordinariness. You could see him as a garbage man, a mechanic, a military enlisted guy, a small business owner. Anonymous, ordinary.
    This doesn’t happen much in American show business – they select for the blindingly physically handsome, which is all very nice, but … not ordinary and convincing in the role of everyman. I think it happens more with British actors – they seem to select for talent, rather than blinding good looks.

  3. I always thought Hackman would have been great as Col. Kurz in Apocalypse Now or as Lt. Col. Kilgore in the same movie. Just imagine him speaking the lines, in his own inimical Gene Hackman style (clipped, staccato, menacing) that were spoken by Brando and Duvall respectively.

    E.g., “Do you know what horror is, captain?”; and, “I love the smell of napalm in the morning.” Etc., etc. I can just hear his voice. . . .

    He played a Kurz-like character in “March or Die,” excelling in his portrayal of a Foreign Legion colonel in the immediate aftermath of the First World War, one traumatized by his experiences on the Western Front, who was alternately insane, brilliant, charismatic, fearless, dangerous — and ultimately suicidal. Completely mad, and “still in the field commanding troops.”

    Just like Kurz . . . or, for that matter, Kilgore.

  4. My guess would be carbon monoxide poisoning with the gas dissipating due to the passage of time.

  5. Neo, sadly you are probably right about securing the dog and then suicide. They appeared to be a very devoted couple. Don’t know why but this lonely death brought tears.

  6. Having put a dog in a closet is odd.
    And apparently, they had at least 1 other dog. No mention of its whereabouts.
    Also, at least 2 weeks had passed!
    All of that … just very sad.

  7. He was so believable in all those ‘every-day, ordinary man’ roles because of that absolute ordinariness.

    –Sgt. Mom

    I have a soft spot for “Target” (1985) in which Hackman plays a retired spy and father to Matt Dillon. They have a spy adventure together. Dillon discovers his ordinary dad is also a formidable force if called upon.

  8. Gene Hackman was America’s greatest character actor.

    You believed him in so many specific roles. We enjoyed seeing whatever new people he could portray and engage us with.

    A consummate actor’s actor.

    Does any younger actor compete with his multitudinous presence? Bradley Cooper, perhaps?

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