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- Richard Widmark: An Appreciation
Richard Widmark: An Appreciation
- By Peter Gutiérrez
- Published 03/28/2008
- Horror Films and Thrillers
- Unrated
Peter Gutiérrez
A member of the Online Film Critics Society, Peter writes for Twitch, Film-Forward, and Rue Morgue. He's also blogs on pop culture at School Library Journal: http://blogs.slj.com/connect-the-pop/ . Get too-frequent pop culture updates via Twitter: @Peter_Gutierrez
View all articles by Peter GutiérrezBut Widmark didn't stop there, didn't repeat himself by constantly playing other hyperkinetic heavies. His intensity, voice and appearance (i.e., good-looking but also a regular guy) were perfect for the emerging genre of noir, and the top directors took notice, casting him as the lead in their best efforts. Most notably, Widmark's star turns in Night and the City (1950) and Pickup on South Street (1953) have helped those films reach legendary status.
In the former, his verbal quickness and ragged physicality were the perfect vehicle for Jules Dassin to send his story careening through an expressionistically shadowy London.
Of course Widmark was not limited to crime thrillers. Over the years he proved that time and again. For example, take his performance as Jim Bowie in The Alamo (1960). He's solid throughout but its in those final doomed moments, as he fights against overpowering odds, that he's electrifying. As a result, his work becomes the most powerful take-away from that film. Indeed, The Alamo is not considered a classic, and that was part of a pattern in his career: to be interesting in material that otherwise wasn't. He had a knack for making disappointing movies such as Don't Bother to Knock (1952) with Marilyn Monroe, or Madigan (1968--later a TV series) with Henry Fonda, always seem a bit more engaging. And when he was in a film that was well written and produced, such as when he played the prosecutor in Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), he could help make it great.
For his talent, his versatility, his screen persona that blended toughness and intelligence--for all these reasons, Richard Widmark will be remembered by generations of film fans to come.
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