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Tag Archives: The Klansman
Richard Burton and the face of a Villain
Richard Burton has been on my mind ever since I watched him a couple of weeks ago in the strange 1971 British film, Villain.
Burton was a regular fixture on the TV screen in our house when I was young. Like a lot of women of her generation, my mother loved him ever since he played Mark Anthony opposite Elizabeth Taylor in the 1963 classic, Cleopatra (the film on which the two met for the first time).
Dad liked his war films, of which there were a few, including Where Eagles Dare (1968), Raid on Rommel (1971), The Wild Geese (1978) and The Longest Day (1962). Burton only had a very brief role in the later, as an RAF pilot shot down over Normandy. A US marine cut off from his outfit stumbles across him lying in the bushes next to a dead German soldier, and Burton gets to utter the immortal line: “He’s dead. I’m crippled. You’re lost. Do you suppose it’s always like that? I mean war.”
Only recently have I come to discover and appreciate some Burton’s other films. His turn as Alec Leamas in the incredibly bleak and noirish 1965 spy thriller, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold still stands as the best and most realistic screen depiction of the Cold War.… Read more
Posted in British crime cinema, Crime film, Heist films, Lee Marvin, Richard Burton
Tagged 1974, Elizabeth Taylor, Ian McShane, Nigel Davenport, Peter Glenville, Raid on Rommel (1971), Richard Burton, Ronnie Cray, The Comedians (1967), The Klansman, The Longest Day (1962), The Spy Who Came in From the Cold (1965), The Wild Geese (1978), Villain (1971), Where Eagles Dare (1968)