Tag Archives: marlon brando

The Fugitive Kind on DVD: Bring Me the Head of Marlon Brando

The Fugitive Kind (1960) The Criterion Collection Ah, the jawline among jawlines, the mandible of the gods! Take a good look at Marlon Brando in this star-packed, Tennessee Williams banquet of psychodrama, in 1960, at the height of his hunkiness, and tell me that the shape of his head, particularly his jaw line, wasn’t substantially responsible for his magnetic allure. Sure, Brando was a genius, if there are too few movies in his filmography to really bear that judgment out, but he was also a nova of iconic sex appeal, and I’m guessing, not being a woman, that his uniquely robust, rock-solid-yet-gently-curved jawbone was the main attraction, more than the mumbling or shrouded eyes or even the muscly shoulders. Certainly more than the acting. Brando’s jaw is one of those things you respond to without necessarily seeing it, like Charlize Theron’s collarbone — look next time.

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The Fugitive Kind on DVD: Bring Me the Head of Marlon Brando

Thomas Haden Church on Don McKay and Going Straight to Cable With Marlon Brando

Expect to see a few new sides of Thomas Haden Church as the title character of Don McKay , a wildly genre-hopping indie featuring the actor as a Boston janitor summoned home after 25 years by his high-school sweetheart Sonny (Elisabeth Shue). Terminally ill and under the care of a brusque, officious nurse (Melissa Leo), Sonny wants to spent the rest of her short life with Don — who wouldn’t mind that himself if not for the mounting levels of suspicion and secrets towering around them. Rookie writer-director Jake Goldberger cites Blood Simple as a seminal influence, but the film draws its primary energy from Church’s strapping, coiled reticence — not to mention the star’s leadership behind the scenes, where he labored for four years in the afterglow of his Oscar-nominated Sideways role to help bring Don McKay to fruition. Church recently spoke with Movieline about building McKay from scratch, wearing his producer hat, the backlash to last year’s loathed All About Steve , and what it was like going to work with Marlon Brando and Charlie Sheen (at the same time!)

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Thomas Haden Church on Don McKay and Going Straight to Cable With Marlon Brando

America’s New It Couple Kiss and Tell on Larry King Live

Unless you’ve been squatting in a partially-developed Williamsburg condo building, surely you’ve heard the news of the torrid Levi Johnston/Kathy Griffin affair currently taking the nation by storm. Tonight, Kathy and Levi dished on their hot Teen Choice Awards date. Frankly, this may have been the most entertaining segment on Larry King Live since the fossilized lizard himself gave Marlon Brando a handjob on the air

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America’s New It Couple Kiss and Tell on Larry King Live