Robert Duvall: American Through and Through
That Robert Duvall is one of the greatest actors to ever grace the silver screen is incontestable. His roles as Gus McCrae in “Lonesome Dove” (1989), Sonny Dewey in “The Apostle” (1997), and Mac Sledge in “Tender Mercies” (1983), are simply unforgettable. In addition to these characters, Duvall gave us famous lines that have literally worked their way into our nation’s lexicon over the years. In particular I’m thinking about his lines, “I love the smell of napalm in the morning” (“Apocalypse Now,” 1976) and “It’s a pretty day for making things right” (“Open Range,” 2003).
Although Duvall has received an Academy Award, two Emmy Awards, and four Golden Globe Awards, among other recognitions, I concur with film maker Lionel Chetwynd in saying that Duvall has not been “elevated to the unique place he [deserves to occupy] in American art.”
So why hasn’t Duvall been elevated to that unique position? Generally, it’s because he’s not your run of the mill Hollywood personality: he makes his home in Virginia instead of Los Angeles or New York City. And specifically, it’s because of his politics.
By his own admission, Duvall “[tends] to be conservative,” which is better that being a leper, but alienates just as many Hollywood elitists nonetheless.
And Duvall isn’t just talking when he says he tends to be conservative. For instance, not only is he open about the fact that he didn’t vote for Obama in 2008, but he laughingly told Mike Huckabee that, “if given the chance, he wouldn’t vote for him again.“ Keep in mind, Duvall not only attended a McCain/Palin rally in Albuquerque during the 2008 election cycle, but also introduced Palin to the crowd there and held a sign reading: “Drill Here! Drill Now!” (I’m sure Robert Redford is pleased as punch about this.)
How many other Hollywood personalities go against the grain to this extent?
Duvall has that which General Stonewall Jackson described as the courage of his convictions: he is true to himself, his country, and the heritage from which he sprung. No wonder Chetwynd said of Duvall, “[he] is authentic to what he thinks, [and] to his background.”
This authenticity is on display when Duvall talks about America. While many others in Hollywood harbor resentment toward our nation for its successes (and its failures), Duvall says: “America is a great country… To me, if this country went down it would be a dark world.”
Whether Hollywood will ever elevate Duvall to the unique place he deserves to hold in film history remains to be seen. Odds are, they won’t do it because of his politics and his patriotism. Fortunately, that hasn’t stopped Duvall from being Duvall.
God bless Robert Duvall.
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Comments
True actors.
Submitted by Red Jeep on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 6:38pm.
Robert Duvall and Gene Hackman. Excellent. Big fan of both.
Both are in their 80's now. Can you believe it? All the movie stars I am a fan of are 80+ or in heaven. Not much talent younger than that.
Love Robert Duvall
Submitted by Blonde on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 6:30pm.
How could Tom Hagen have not been included as one of his great roles?
Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)
Was wondering that myself, J.
Submitted by bkeyser on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 6:48pm.
Was wondering that myself, J.
Consigliari
Submitted by rowdygirl on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 1:13pm.
I was thinking the same thing.... I just watched Godfather I&II again (for the 20th time at least) and was again struck by his performances.. he's great.
I appreciate his convictions and his ability to stay true to them. Too bad he's in such rare (Hollywood) company.
Tam
Best Ever
Submitted by Inthe gray on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 6:43pm.
A fairly little known movie "A Family Thing"...as well as "Second Hand Lions".....the movies didn't necessarily set the world on fire but his acting in them was second to none. I hope he lives forever and mine is the last face he sees...
Second Hand Lions
Submitted by Blonde on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 6:46pm.
*Smacks Head*....how could I have forgotten that? I absolutely adore that movie.
Meat!!!!
Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)
Second hand lions was great,
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 8:04pm.
Second hand lions was great, they died with their boots on. Actually have you ever seen THX 1138? Its interesting and you can see Duvall's acting imprint in the piece.
Its great that Duvall is a patriot.
Too bad
Submitted by DemsRFascists on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 8:14pm.
Too bad Stonewall Jackson was such an ass...
(Pro-Choice on a white man's "Right to Choose' to own slaves, for example).
Back in Jackson's day, Democrats wanted someone to pick their cotton for them. Today, they want someone to pay for their Health Care for them.
The more things change...
I can't believe no one has mentioned The Great Santini
Submitted by Dave. on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 8:34pm.
I have long thought that among his best performances.
-Dave
Vote for the American in November
The Great Santini
Submitted by stratman on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 10:00pm.
If you hadn't posted this I would have.
MASH, Bullitt, True Grit and scores more.
If Duvall is in a movie, I will watch it.
strat, as the son of a Marine...
Submitted by Dave. on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 10:39pm.
...I really identified with Bull Meechum, and particularly with his son.
I guess that is why many overlooked that most excellent film, because most people in America just weren't raised by Marines, and thus can't make the connection.
-Dave
Vote for the American in November
Broken Trail anyone? I love
Submitted by Radical1979 on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 9:09pm.
Broken Trail anyone? I love the way cowboys are portrayed. Independent, hard working, and very male without making a big deal about it.
For a moment I thought you
Submitted by stratman on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 10:05pm.
For a moment I thought you wrote "Broken Tail"!
Just kidding. But it did make me think - can you even imagine Duvall contemplating starring in a movie like Brokeback Mountain?
Times have changed. Thank goodness Mr. Duvall did not.
Lonesome Dove
Submitted by Newsbubba on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 9:12pm.
Has to be my favorite book of all time, primarily because Robert Duvall is the image of Gus in my mind the entire time I'm reading it. He is my hero, for all time. Must have read the book a dozen times so far.
It got me hooked on Larry McMurtry and I've read them all, but nothing touches Lonesome Dove.
If you have never read it, do yourself a great favor and do so. It is a story of the best of America, and it is how we need to remember to be today.
The book was awesome---
Submitted by matthewdean on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 10:30pm.
the mini-series as well; and Mr. D. an all-time, unforgettable favorite.
He played 'Boo Radley' in "To Kill a Mockingbird".
MD
Indeed he did, MD.
Submitted by Newsbubba on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:40pm.
Most people totally overlook that role, because I think that he was so young that they don't even realize it was him, and he was in a great movie with a great actor, Gregory Peck..
Virginia is proud to have Mr.
Submitted by johnsonl on Tue, 12/07/2010 - 9:48pm.
Virginia is proud to have Mr. Duvall as a resident and son of the Old Dominion.
Assassination Tango
Submitted by KC Mulville on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 11:09am.
Amen to what others have said. If Duvall's in it, I'll watch it.
He gave an interview a few years ago about his own interest in the tango. He had studied it, mastered it, and the movie he produced in which the tango ... a dance ... played a significant dramatic role ... my friends, anyone who can make a dance into a relevant character, that's a true artist. That's what artistry is all about.
I saw a documentary on John Ford a few years ago. In it, someone mentioned that the whole masculinity of art had been lost. The assumption is that all artists are now either gay or wish they were. Back in the day, we had front-line directors like John Ford, William Wyler, or writers like Hemingway, and so on. They were macho before macho was merely a posture.
There aren't many top-level "artists" these days who can be utterly masculine. It's a short list. Clint Eastwood. (Just an aside -- has anyone put out more, and more interesting, films that Eastwood?)
I'd put Duvall in that category. A true artist, and yet utterly masculine.
~Art and masculinity
Submitted by Wrathful Brunette on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 11:37am.
I've known a lot of gay men, and most of them work in some sort of creative field. They make "pretty" things; they have a feminine sense of beauty. One effect of the homosexual takeover of the arts is to push manly men away from a field perceived to be the haunt of fairies. All the masters of the Renaissance were intensely masculine men: Michelangelo, Cellini, Da Vinci, etc., so it isn't as if homosexuals have a corner on artistic ability.
At least they were manly fairies.
Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:17pm.
There is considerable evidence that Michelangelo, Cellini, and Da Vinci were also intensely homosexual.
Jer
~Really?
Submitted by Wrathful Brunette on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:24pm.
I take it you've read Cellini's autobiography, as I have.....
No, I haven't.
Submitted by Jer on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:30pm.
Did he discuss his being charged with sodomizing young boys?
Jer
~Actually
Submitted by Wrathful Brunette on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:43pm.
He was charged with sodomy by a prostitute he used as a model. He kicked her and her mother out of his house when he found out she was sleeping with one of the young men who worked for him. She lodged a false charge against him as revenge. You see, being charged with sodomy was such a scandalous thing that it was frequently used as a smear tactic against one's enemies. In France, where he was living at the time, it was punishable by burning. The charge was so patently false the judge let him go.
No evidence, just liberal and
Submitted by bassndude on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:43pm.
No evidence, just liberal and homo speculation. According to the homosexual club members, everyone that has or will ever live, if they did not marry, (and some if they did), was or is a homosexual. That is how they justify their life style of debauchery.
Save a SeAL, club a liberal/troll!!
~And of course
Submitted by Wrathful Brunette on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 12:57pm.
the illegitimate children Cellini sprinkled around the Continent prove nothing.
No need to reject anything
Submitted by KC Mulville on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 1:02pm.
A corner on ability ... that's right.
And to be clear, there's no need to throw out anything. Art is neither masculine nor feminine, gay or straight. So there's no need to reject the art that exists now. But it would be a benefit to everyone to have more "masculine" art (I don't know if that's the right term; I'm winging it here).
It does seem, though, that masculine art is unwelcome in the art "business." Art is as much an industry as a talent, and the business is subject to the same herd mentality that every other industry suffers from. By industry, I mean Hollywood, Broadway, and whatever passes as the headquarters for literature, painting, music, etc.
~Masculine art
Submitted by Wrathful Brunette on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 1:16pm.
Michelangelo's David comes to mind. I would define 'masculine' art as the type that represents/glorifies manhood, usually in the form of some kind of struggle/battle. Man is a fighting animal. An emasculated man is one who won't fight, who doesn't believe in/care enough about anything to fight for it.
Did you see the film "The Postman"? The protagonist is initially portrayed as a weak man looking only to fill his own belly. He becomes a man when he finds his heart, finds something to love, and then fights for it.
I did
Submitted by KC Mulville on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 1:34pm.
I also think of Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino. Being a true man isn't, in the end, about trash-talking together, or making money, or those things. His statement at the end of the movie was that a real man does what has to be done. He sacrifices. He serves, without whining or complaining, and doesn't count the cost to himself.
That's a message you don't hear enough in our society. Can a woman do the same? Sure. But it's a message that young men need to hear, if we want them to become men.
~Men become so through initiation
Submitted by Wrathful Brunette on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 6:45pm.
Like Eastwood's character initiated the young Vietnamese boy. There isn't enough of that anymore, too many young men have grown up fatherless.
I think this is something people understand instinctively, given the number of books and movies that portray the concept.