| Index | 7 reviews in total |
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Good documentary on one of our greats, 19 October 2007
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Author:
blanche-2 from United States
Richard Schickel's 1991 documentary about Gary Cooper - "Gary Cooper:
American Life, American Legend" gives us a look at the tremendous,
all-American star through his films and his life. Narrated by Clint
Eastwood, the theme is definitely "Gary Coooper, American" as we are
taken through fast clips of his many appearances in westerns, and
scenes from "Meet John Doe," "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, and "Sgt. York."
The best part of the documentary is the home movies of Cooper and his
family as well as his childhood photos, showing him as a beautiful
blonde kid with the sunny smile he would have his entire life. There is
also a hilarious clip of Cooper on "The Jack Benny Show" doing the
comeback on the number "Bird Dog" - and Benny loses it. The documentary
also takes us briefly through his tumultuous affair with Patricia Neal,
which nearly ruined both their lives.
There's a certain cohesiveness missing from this bio/retrospective - it
jumps around a lot and has no footage of Cooper being interviewed,
which would have added a lot. Also, Clint Eastwood's narration was
described as unobtrusive. What it was, was boring and monotone. Given
that Cooper himself tended to be the strong, silent type on screen, we
could have used a little animation.
On a personal note, Gary Cooper was one of the handsomest men who ever
lived - there were some looks at him in his early films, but not nearly
enough for this fan. That smile, those lips, that bone structure - he
was handsome throughout his life, but in films like "Morocco" and
"Desire," he is devastating. Instead of sitting through a scene from
one of his worst performances, as Howard Roark in "The Fountainhead,"
giving a speech that he admitted to the author he did not understand -
a young, suave Cooper in a tux would have been a nice touch. This
documentary, alas, was definitely produced by a man.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Nice Overview of Coop's Life and Career., 13 August 2009
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Author:
Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Richard Schickel, who wrote and directed this, is a perceptive
observer. His presentation of self in TV interviews is nasal, wry, and
comfortingly casual. No egg head stuff here.
As a writer, he doesn't quite measure up. In his reviews, his essays,
and his narrative for this documentary on Gary Cooper, we are bombarded
with careless, shopworn phrases. I kept waiting for the presenter,
Clint Eastwood, to say something like, "Little did Coop know that
tragedy lay just around the corner." Yet, stylistic triteness aside,
this is a pretty good review, beginning with Cooper's childhood,
continuing through his career, his friendships with people like
Hemingway, his marriage and affairs, to the end of his life from
prostate cancer.
Schickel makes some editorial comments, but I'm going to accept them
because for the most part, I agree with them. Yes, the McCarthy witch
hunts were bad. It's almost painful to watch footage of Cooper before
the House Unamerican Activities Committee -- acting. Asked what he does
for a living, Cooper replies, "I'm an actor," then looks around
briefly, waiting for the laughs, jiggling his eyebrows a little to
indicate that this is a joke. He was what Schickel calls a respectful
conservative. Would that there were more like Cooper today.
Schickel also comes right out and calls Ayn Rand's "objectivism" bad.
It's the foundation, so to speak, of Cooper's movie about an architect
named Roark who refuses to compromise his principles, will accept help
from no one else, and refuses to help others. The enemy is
"collectivism," by which Rand meant getting along with one's neighbors
and thinking of the common good. I can't imagine how Cooper ever found
himself snagged into playing Roark. The screenplay, by Rand herself,
has him giving a looooong climactic speech contrasting "the creator"
with "the social parasites." The role sits uncomfortably on Cooper's
head, like one of those over-sized Stetsons from his early cowboy
movies. Cooper as hero, yes. Cooper as contemptuous braggart, no.
But Schickel's documentary wisely focuses on the actor's more
successful efforts -- "Sergeant York," "High Noon," and the rest -- and
fits them into their several Zeitgeists.
He does a pretty good job, despite the corny narrative. Cooper was one
of those guys that nobody seemed to dislike. He was easy to work with,
short on guile, handsome without being beautiful, and a decent
minimalist actor. He didn't win the Oscar for "Sergeant York." His
eyebrows did.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
A look at the career of the Cooper/Capra everyman..., 7 May 2009
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Author:
Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
GARY COOPER found his niche in westerns, never requiring a lot of talk
but a lot of fast action and quick on the trigger in cowboy roles.
His likable and unpretentious manner of acting, combined with his
natural good looks made him a natural for films, after attending
college and thinking of a career as an artist. Once the public got a
brief glimpse of him in WINGS, his career path was determined. He'd
become an actor.
Described by the narrator as "one of the most romantic figures of the
screen," we see a series of clips from his famous films, where he
gradually attained stardom as the "everyman" in films like MR. DEEDS
GOES TO TOWN and MEET JOHN DOE.
Off screen, he was hardly everyman. He and his wife and children lived
in luxury, with a huge swimming pool as a playground and lots of skiing
and target practice on shooting expeditions.
On the eve of WWII, Warner Bros. released SERGEANT YORK and Cooper's
fine performance, playing his first real-life hero, won the Academy
Award. While at Warners, his three-year romance with Patricia Neal is
touched upon only briefly before we get to HIGH NOON and another award
for Cooper's work.
The commentary by Clint Eastwood is not particularly illuminating and
is delivered in the dry Eastwood manner and in a monotone. The story of
Cooper's career concludes with an emotional James Stewart at the 1961
Oscars presenting Cooper with a special Oscar honoring his career while
the actor was home terminally ill with cancer.
Summing up: Not really the most illuminating biography of the great
star, nor does it overcome the notion that many have that Cooper was a
star personality with a limited range of emotion. There's an almost
wooden look to much of Cooper's underacting, in my opinion.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Decent Doc, 17 May 2009
Author:
Michael_Elliott from Louisville, KY
Gary Cooper: American Life, American Legend (1991)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
Clint Eastwood narrates this documentary that takes a look at the
career of legend Gary Cooper. Calling this a documentary is a little
unfair as the only person talking is Eastwood and he only casually
drops in to say a few lines. The rest of the film pretty much just
shows us clips from all his movies including WINGS, PRIDE OF THE
YANKEES, SERGENT YORK, HIGH NOON and many other classics. There's
really two ways to look at this and one is that if you haven't seen any
of Cooper's great films then you should enjoy what you see here enough
to where you'd want to go out and buy the films. On the other hand, if
you've seen these movies already then you really don't learn too much.
The only personal stuff really talked about is Cooper's disastrous
affair with Patricia Neal and how he changed his life before his death.
The Honorary Oscar award, which was accepted by James Stewart, is shown
here and was quite touching. That footage makes this documentary worth
sitting through, although a more complete one is certainly needed.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
A career and life story of Gary Cooper, deeply moving through its very simplicity, 15 February 2006
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Author:
virlogeuxhm from France
Exclusively for Coop's lovers, though Clint Eastwood very strong though unobtrusive presence is a great asset of this very good documentary film. It is a biography of Gary Cooper, based mainly on his filmography, but also on more private archives, which show him as a child, as a young man, as a family man, with some of his friends (Picasso, Hemingway, etc.), as an older man, finally as a sick and close-to-death man. After "the end", I did not have the feeling that I knew the man any much better. But I have spent a very good moment, re-viewing many of the best moments of his movies; and my respect for the very talented actor and great professional was increased tenfold. The film shows, most interestingly, how the career of Cooper can be paralleled with the evolution of USA society before and after WW2. Two of the great moments are the time when Cooper has to answer justice about communism in the movie world; and when James Stewart (a very great one, too) received an Award for Cooper one month before his death. I'm not a weeping pot, but... that was a close one! Watch it, if you can: it is so much worth while. ... If you love Cooper, that is. Or an older America...
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Trying Hard To Look Like Gary Cooper, Super Duper, 27 January 2011
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Probably no other screen legend was so perfectly cast as a hero as was
Gary Cooper. Even in later years when an edge of cynicism crept into
his roles, you always saw Coop piercing through those expressive eyes
hoping the world was not really as bad as he was seeing.
Richard Schickel's production had the good fortune to acquire the
services of Clint Eastwood as narrator. The parallels between High Noon
and Dirty Harry are hard to miss. Both Will Kane and Harry Callahan are
highly moral men who've taken it on themselves to do a disagreeable job
that few step up to the plate to do.
Much as I admire what Cooper did in High Noon, his more straightforward
heroes appeal to me best. Mr. Deeds Goes To Town, Meet John Doe,
Sergeant York and my personal favorite of all his films Friendly
Persuasion are more of what I like to see from him on screen. Even what
I consider one of his worst films, The Fountainhead got a viewing
mainly because of his relationship with Patricia Neal.
What was really nice was a clip from the Jack Benny Show with Coop
trying his hand at the Everly Brothers classic Johnny Is A Joker. I
have a radio broadcast on vinyl of Coop with his Paramount buddy Bing
Crosby on his radio show post World War II. That's a treasure.
And so is the work and memory of Gary Cooper.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Good documentary--I just wish it was longer., 6 February 2010
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
I was really surprised to see that unlike most documentaries, this was
written, directed and produced by a film critic-- Richard Schickel.
Most of the times I know of where film critics had major involvement in
films, the films turns out to be bombs (Rex Reed starring in "Myra
Breckenridge" and Roger Ebert writing "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls"
are prime examples). However, in this case, the critic's powers are
used for good and not evil--and the results are better (though this
isn't saying much, as the films I just mentioned are among the worst
films ever made).
As for the documentary, it's narrated by Clint Eastwood (a pretty good
choice) and manages to discuss his long career--from his silent days
until his death in the early 1960s. The only negatives, and they are
slight, are that the film is awfully short (as are most film
documentaries) and there is very little about Gary Cooper as a human
being--you really don't learn all that much about his life. However, as
a nice overview of his films, it works very well.
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