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Nathan Miller pays tribute to screen legend Marlon Brando, who died this week aged 80 |
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"Whaddya got?" Marlon Brando, the biggest icon of American corpulence since Elvis, has died at the age of eighty. He was probably the greatest screen actor of his generation (some would say of all time) and although he was also one of the most inconsistent, he changed the profession forever. Marlon Brando made his name, and helped create his first American classic, as Stanley Kowalski in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire, first on stage, then, in 1951, on the silver screen. His brooding energy, demonic good looks and sheer presence made him destined to become a star. His ambiguous, menacing style was less suited to the Technicolor Sixties, but his last two legendary performances, both for Francis Ford Coppola, helped define Seventies cinema's new wave. In doing so, he created yet another American icon in The Godfather, a mesmerizing performance in a masterpiece film.
In between those two films, he helped create the genres of the arthouse sex-and-death sensation (by being the top in mainstream cinema's first anal sex scene) and the vastly expensive cameo (by being Superman's dad). Subsequently, he became more notable for appearing on set semi-naked (to avoid long shots exposing his massive girth) than the quality of his acting. Very recently he was reportedly hiding his Oscar from the debt collectors. His personal life was also so fraught that, sadly, the possibility he was Courtney Love's biological father would have been the least of his worries... On screen though, and despite the fact that his reputation is based on relatively few `great' performances (and even fewer truly great films), Brando's status as a messy, beautiful symbol of Comment (0) Socialise
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"What are you rebelling against, Johnny?"
He was hailed as the poster boy for Method acting, but more than detailed research and immersion in a role, his skill was in his sympathetic portrayal of a character's flaws, alongside flashes of genius inspiration. These qualities are especially evident in Apocalypse Now's Colonel Kurtz, the role that marked the final stage between sometimes brilliant actor and full-time maverick. Coppola had expected a lean, handsome, military renegade. He got a shaved and bloated madman who hadn't read the source novel, didn't think much of the script, and had decided to make it up as he went along. Brando also refused to be filmed except in near-darkness. He never gave a performance as good as that again.