Showing posts with label Sir Sean Connery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sir Sean Connery. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2020

The Late Sean Connery Was The Greatest James Bond, But He Was Much More

With Sir Sean Connery passing at age 90, the tributes to the great Scot actor are flying across the printed press and the Internet. 

Yes, he was the first and best film actor to portray Ian Fleming’s iconic character James Bond (American actor Barry Nelson first portrayed Bond in a poor TV adaptation of Casino Royale), but he was much more. 

He offered many other fine and memorable roles in such films as The Hill, The Offense, The Great Train Robbery, The Molly Maguires, The Rock, The Anderson Tapes, The Hunt for Red October and many other great films. 

Kyle Smith at the New York Post touches on three other Sean Connery films, two of which are favorites of mine, The Man Who Would be King and Robin and Marion, and a film I didn’t care for, The Untouchables, but agree that Sean Connery was great in his role. 

Sean Connery may have been the ultimate British adventurer-rogue, but when I think of great Sean Connery portrayals, my mind goes right to Danny Dravot, aka “The Man Who Would be King.” 

Connery and Michael Caine had the time of their lives playing two scrappy British sergeants out to retrace the steps of Alexander the Great and conquer Afghanistan in the exhilarating 1975 John Huston film based on Rudyard Kipling’s novel. At one point Danny and Caine’s Peachy Carnahan are trapped on a mountain with no possible means of escape. And what do they do? They have a laugh about all the good times they’ve known. A big, roaring, boisterous laugh. Such a laugh that the two men touch off an avalanche which creates a bridge of snow over a chasm that allows them to escape. That was Connery and Caine throughout their careers — two working-class blokes bluffing themselves to one great big merry laugh of a life. 

… Two other great death scenes displayed Connery’s range, his emotional warmth, his vitality: in “Robin and Marian” (1976), in which Connery plays Robin Hood at the end of his life and an incandescent Audrey Hepburn plays his lady fair in what turned out to be her final great performance, on his deathbed Connery’s Robin delivers an indescribably beautiful farewell: “I love you. More than all you know. I love you more than children. More than fields I’ve planted with my hands. I love you more than morning prayers or peace or food to eat. I love you more than sunlight, more than flesh or joy.” 

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:

https://nypost.com/2020/10/31/sean-connery-showed-us-the-way-things-ought-to-be-done/ 










Saturday, August 15, 2015

Sir Sean Connery At 85: Showbiz Pals Pay Tribute To Scotland's Greatest Movie Star


John Dingwall at the Scottish newspaper the Daily Record reports that BBC Scotland will air a documentary on one of my favorite actors, the Great Scot, Sean Connery.

As Sir Sean Connery reaches his 85th birthday, friends, actors and directors have paid tribute to Scotland’s greatest movie star.
Sir Jackie Stewart, Pierce Brosnan, Laurence Fishburne and George Lucas are among big names in a 60-minute BBC Scotland documentary on the ultimate James Bond’s life and career.
The film features archive interviews with Connery spanning 50 years until his retirement from acting in 2003.
Connery will turn 85 on August 25 but it was in 1962 that he redefined the action hero with a role that catapulted him to global superstardom.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
Note: It is true that Bond author Ian Fleming was initially not pleased with the role of Commander Bond being portrayed by the rugged, working class Connery, but he soon warmed to him. And the rest, as they say, is history. 

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Great Scot: James Bond Actor Sir Sean Connery Tops List Of Most Popular British Actors in America

 
Jennifer Smith at the British newspaper the Daily Mail offers a piece on the survey that selected Sir Sean Connery, one of my favorite actors, as the most popular British actor in America.

Despite not having appeared on the big screen for over ten years, Sir Sean Connery is the most popular British actor among American film fans, it has emerged.

The James Bond star was listed as the most recognisable and well-liked actor in a recent US survey which measures the public's opinion of celebrities.

The Q score charts, which are carried out every six months among 1, 500 people by the New York based Q Scores Company, has released its 'Brit Q' rankings in which the 83-year-old actor triumphed.

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2477819/Sean-Connery-tops-list-popular-British-actors-America.html