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George C. Scott Dead at 71

ozzie writes "George C. Scott, the actor we all know and love from such unbelievably great movies as Dr. Strangelove and Patton died yesterday at the age of 71. Check out ABCNews for more. " Given the current poll, this seems strangely connected - in any case, I remember his role in Dr. Strangelove with fondness. If you haven't seen that classic, rent it tonight.

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  1. George C. Scott by ajakk · · Score: 4

    Personally, George C. Scott holds a special place in my heart because he is in two of my favorite movies of all time: Dr. Stangelove and Patton. While he was definately a character actor, I think that George C. Scott plays the powerful person who has a fatal weakness like no other. He had the ability to present a character that could otherwise be dissmissed as a typical arrogant bastard with a skill that I think is still unmatched.

    I have been reading past interviews with him this morning and it is very refreshing to see how humble he was. Check out here for a very good bit on his life. It was done before he died.

  2. Re:Rent it tonight... by Sethb · · Score: 3

    I saw the headline and thought "That's weird" I just rented Dr. Strangelove from Netflix.com yesterday on DVD. It'll be here probably tomorrow so that I can watch it for the first time. Of course, I'm only posting this now that I've confimed mine has shipped, as I don't want the whole of Slashdot attempting to rent the DVD I want *grin* For those who haven't checked it out before, Netflix is pretty cool, they rent DVDs through the mail. No I don't own any part of them, or get any money from them, it's just a handy service, since my local video store has a rather small (but still growing) collection of DVDs.
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    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
  3. Even better than his quotes... by grappler · · Score: 4

    His facial expressions and gestures are even better than his quotes in Strangelove. Watch the movie and just pay close attention to those. It'll leave you in tears. It's even funnier than any of the three Sellers characters or Slim Pickins' plane ride.

    Strangelove's brief apperance was pretty good tho :-)

    Fun fact about the movie: The plane captain was going to be a fourth Sellers role, but he was unsure about the Texan accent, so they used Slim Pickins instead. And, when the movie was being filmed, Kubrick didn't tell Pickins that the movie was a comedy. He thought he was the hero.


    Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeehaaaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwww.....

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    grappler

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    Vidi, Vici, Veni
  4. A Christmas Carol by teleny · · Score: 3

    He didn't want to be Scrooge, but aced it anyway. "I played him as the lonliest man in the world." he said, and managed to go through an entire spectrum of emotion in two hours. From his solitary Christmas eve meal (of Scotch oatmeal, very much in period) to cowering in fear at the thought of his own demise, to hoisting Tiny Tim aloft in wild manic glee, he made you BELIEVE the story, so much so that I kept saying "This is modern. This is not Dickens at all. The scriptwriters must have tossed this or that in for TV." Nope. I wanted to break my own nose. And I'm a girl.

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    teleny, friend of cats.
  5. Fav Quotes from the master.... G.C.S. by _ECC_ · · Score: 3

    Priest: "I saw a bible by your bedside, do you find time to read it?"
    Patton: "Every god damn day" =]


    Patton: "Rommell! you magnificent bastard... I READ YOUR BOOK!"


    GSC as the general in Dr Strangelove: "You can't let him in here... he'll.... he'll see the big board!"

    when he and the ambasador from russia are fighting,
    President: "Gentlemen.. you can't fight in the war room!" hehe oh the irony

    And the whole scene about the bombers flyin' in low, "if the pilot is real good" =] heh oh my

    argh I know I'm forgetting some REAL good ones... lets make this a quote thread =]

    Patton: "My soul thirsth for thee",
    Ecc

  6. Accolades by babbage · · Score: 3

    The Yahoo / Reuters news piece notes that he twice turned down awards -- first a best actor Oscar for Patton, then an Emmy the next year for an Arthur Miller play. Turned them down on grounds that "he did not feel it was right to compete with other actors."

    I can't speak for anyone else, but I admire that. Would any of today's actors do that? I doubt it.



  7. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3

    Comment removed based on user account deletion