Joe's post, at blog MOVIES MADE ME, considers the overlap in Lance Henriksen's film choices with the Western film.
Snippet:
Lance loves making westerns and, as filmmakers Philip Kaufman (who directed Lance in THE RIGHT STUFF) and Walter Hill (who directed Lance in JOHNNY HANDSOME) both attest, he's a natural for them. Kaufman says, "When I first met Lance, I knew. He had an intensity. I felt he was one of those real-life cowboys." Hill adds, “I think it might have been better if Lance had come along thirty years earlier – because he was born to do westerns. He looks so natural wearing the hat and riding the horse. When he walks into a bar, everybody looks up. He’s got that quality.”
When I started writing the biography, I mainly thought of Lance Henriksen as a horror movie icon - one of those rare character actors who can bring life to the darkest roles: Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Vincent Price. As I was writing, I began to see him in a very different light... as an actor with just as much in common with Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda, Lee Marvin or Charles Bronson. Much like director John Carpenter, Lance has spent a large part of his career making "hidden westerns." I count eighteen western-themed projects over the course of nearly three decades... which is not bad for a guy who got into film-making three years after the western genre effectively died at the box office. Here's the list...
This one was a blast to read! And Joe included a number of great stills in the piece. Thanks, John & Joe.
ReplyDeleteThis is a wonderful indicator that Joe's book is going to be a homerun.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to it.
I also have to concur with Joe in that My eyes were opened considerably over the last month.
There was much more to Lance Henriksen than I was truly aware. My discoveries of his work showed me depth to the man I had never known.
To be honest, I was merely scratching the surface and those roles that piqued my interest in him were few.
best,
SFF