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Robert Duvall Dead at 95

https://www.newsweek.com/entertainment/hollywood-legend-robert-duvall-dead-at-95-11531295
81•glimshe•1h ago

Comments

markus_zhang•1h ago
Jeez I thought he was long gone. The family will remember your service, Mr. Hagen.
bdcravens•1h ago
He's one of those actors that if you told me he was dead, I wouldn't have been surprised, but then you go to the theater and in some random role, there he is.
hinkley•1h ago
It really messes with me though when someone dies before their last film came out. I watched that Batman movie with a knot in my stomach the whole time.

“He’s so good. But he’s gone. WTF.”

I don’t recall who now but there was some actor whose last film came out more than a year after he died, and that felt messed up and I can’t articulate why.

FreakLegion•41m ago
Brandon Lee and Paul Walker come to mind. A year delay or more isn't rare, I don't think.
bdcravens•37m ago
River Phoenix had a role (Dark Blood) that he OD'd while filming, and it was put on hold, but then eventually finished and released 19 years later.
bdcravens•39m ago
Paul Walker is probably the most recent one to fall into that category. I believe his character will be in the next Fast and the Furious movie, but it'll be a CGI role (with family members standing in as the body/face they CG-enhance)
tokyobreakfast•1h ago
He was very underrated in Falling Down, a sleeper of a film everyone should see at least once.
hearsathought•1h ago
If we are talking underrated films he was in, my choice would be Deep Impact.
detourdog•18m ago
The Apostle is a great movie of his one doesn't hear mentioned a lot.
StoneAndSky•1h ago
I don't remember it being a "sleeper"; I recall it stirring quite a bit of controversy at the time. It came out in the pre-Columbine "Going Postal" era. But agreed: it's worth a watch.
browningstreet•1h ago
It’s a smaller movie, given the talent involved, but very interesting. The controversy undermined the viability of its popular legacy.

Kind of like Passengers (half kidding, but the controversy on this one always felt like an inadvertent bend of timeliness).

dcrazy•7m ago
I was very surprised to learn that Joel Schumacher directed Falling Down.
stronglikedan•1h ago
> sleeper

Obligatory, I do not think it means what you think it means.

When that film first debuted, you couldn't throw a rock without hitting someone who knew of it.

threethirtytwo•50m ago
We're old. When younger people uncover the greatness of an older movie, from there perspective it's equivalent to uncovering a sleeper.
soupfordummies•45m ago
It's just memory-holed to the point of being purposefully buried at this point.

This comment and a similar one on reddit are the only times I've even seen it mentioned anywhere (IRL or otherwise) in 10+ years

Waterluvian•1h ago
Falling Down is a brilliant film. I think Duvall’s sober, gentle, unfazed detective is exactly what makes it work.

The entire movie D-FENS is running into people who trigger him or push back and justify his rage. So the whole time you’re rooting for him. He’s the protagonist! And then you get to the end and the detective just doesn’t give him the same response. But you never worry that Duvall is about to be a victim. And I think it’s very difficult to portray a character who is seasoned, gentle, grandfatherly, but doesn’t come off in the slightest as prey.

The movie is a bit of a gut punch because I think it does encourage you to cheer for him sticking it to The Man and the Nazis and the corporations, only to realize ,alongside Douglas, that “I’m the bad guy?”

Markoff•1h ago
I wanted to write RIP Prendergast, but since you mentioned it I put it here, whole movie flew under radar, masterpiece.
helterskelter•39m ago
Don't forget Network.
SirFatty•27m ago
Like the other sleeper, Apocalypse Now. :-D
toomuchtodo•1h ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Duvall

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000380/

partiallypro•1h ago
He has too many great films to list, but one I really like that is lesser by him known nowadays is "Secondhand Lions."
robertcope•1h ago
Agreed, absolutely fantastic movie.
xqcgrek2•1h ago
why do people venerate actors?
curiousObject•1h ago
Actors express the human condition, and that’s more difficult than you think.

To pretend to be a person that you are not, on demand, for months on end, is hard and it demands great empathy and skill.

Rooster61•1h ago
Because the service they render brings joy and entertainment to a large multitude of people. It is a higher visibility job than most, and is largely an individual contribution in and of the service they provide
paulcole•1h ago
why do people venerate computer scientists?
browningstreet•1h ago
Because they became part of our stories through performance and iterations. We experienced their work.
twoodfin•1h ago
Also, stories and those who tell them have been kind of a big deal for us homo sapiens now north of 50,000 years.
asveikau•1h ago
People see them on the screen so often they think they know them. I guess the term "parasocial relationship" has been common in the last few years to describe this.

I guess for actors and other types of artist specifically, people relate strongly to the work. It can form the basis for life memories. You remember where you were when you heard a song or saw a movie.

bdcravens•1h ago
The same reason they venerate anyone: common positive experiences.
slibhb•1h ago
Why do people like fictional narrative so much? I'm not sure why, other than some platitude like "forming narratives is how people understand the world". But I'm not sure why it follows that fictional narratives are so important to us.
bubblewand•44m ago
Very-publicly doing work that lots of people enjoy tends to have that effect.
beej71•25m ago
They don't, in particular. They venerate people who have done amazing things.
5555624•1h ago
"Atchley do you realize that several Marines were killed by the Japanese at Pearl Harbor while taking craps?" "No, sir." "A fighting man must be vigilant to surprise attack no matter where he is. The survival of our nation depends on the readiness of Marines all over the world. Also more importantly, you only wiped yourself twice - grossly insufficient. Right now, germs with names you can't even pronounce are preparing to launch a devastating attack that will render you helpless in the defense of your country... Do you read me?" (The Great Santini)
pdonis•56m ago
Classic. I also love the scene where he tells the squadron of which he's just become CO that they should think of him as God.
ChrisArchitect•1h ago
NYT obit: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/16/movies/robert-duvall-dead...
justin66•1h ago
Peculiar to think he was already forty when THX 1138 came out, 55 (!) years ago.
brightball•59m ago
He was a huge Clemson fan.

https://www.tigernet.com/clemson-football/story/legendary-ac...

sgt•54m ago
RIP Duval - he inspired me, like he inspired many others. I can't explain why, but his demeanour and sensibility. Recently watched Open Range. Need to watch more of his westerns.
ReptileMan•32m ago
RIP Duval - he inspired me too. Recently watched Apocalypse Now.
seanalltogether•49m ago
My dad was a big fan of westerns, so Lonesome Dove was a big deal in our house when I was a kid. Sometimes I think about showing them to my son, but I know there's no way he'll have the patience to sit through it all. I'm worried that I might not have the patience either anymore.
stephc_int13•45m ago
Sad that even obituaries are written by AI these days...
beej71•27m ago
No kidding. He deserves better.
delichon•37m ago
The Duvall pic that hit me hardest was The Stone Boy. I saw it just once forty years ago and it can still make my eyes leak.
NickC25•19m ago
Thank you for your work, Don Hagen.
ZoomZoomZoom•10m ago
Don't know about the States, but across the pond from there, THX 1138 is not as well known as it probably deserves. I hope the public here can appreciate this Sci-Fi movie and Duvall is great there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/THX_1138

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