Robin Williams Dead

I'm really upset by this. Just the other day I re-watched Good Will Hunting with my girlfriend to show her how good it was and all I was doing was ranting about how good he was and how he made the movie.

 

GWH is my 2nd favourite movie ever, and I loved him in it.

Insomnia is in my top 10, a cracking movie, and he is incredible in it.

One Hour Photo, not sure if I liked it or loved it but every bit of praise I have for that film was due to him. He was so good in it.

And he was the reason I used to watch Law and Order SVU, he was the antagonist in the 200th episode and smashed it. 

 

He was very good in serious roles I think.

Absolutely devastated. Grew up with his films. A genius who could make you laugh and cry with just the change of an expression.

Terribly sad.

I'm really upset by this. Just the other day I re-watched Good Will Hunting with my girlfriend to show her how good it was and all I was doing was ranting about how good he was and how he made the movie.
GWH is my 2nd favourite movie ever, and I loved him in it.
Insomnia is in my top 10, a cracking movie, and he is incredible in it.
One Hour Photo, not sure if I liked it or loved it but every bit of praise I have for that film was due to him. He was so good in it.
And he was the reason I used to watch Law and Order SVU, he was the antagonist in the 200th episode and smashed it.
He was very good in serious roles I think.


I totally forgot he was in insomnia.
Cracking film.

not being smart but death to smoochy was a fav,

 

reindeer ******* rudolph.

 

EDIT: Rainbow ■■■■■■■ Randolph

 

i dont think i could have got that more wrong if i tried.

Came here to post the same sameolds. Hidden gem amongst he's other stuff.

 

"I'm going safari motherf---er. S A F A R I!"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NMZItkArDU

 

1:30 to 3mins, 8:10 until they move on from Robin.

 

One of my all-time favourites actors. Though I thoroughly enjoyed his stand-up shows and interviews, oddly there weren't many of his pure comedies I enjoyed that much (Death to Smoochy aside), it was his dramatic roles (or roles that offered a duality - an outlet in parts for his well-known madcap improv comedy whilst also allowing him to sink his teeth into darker subject matter). For a comedian who made his name for his off-the-wall antics and manic energy, he had an impressive ability to reign himself in and just dwell within the subtleties that some of his dramatic roles required.

 

That ferocious black dog doesn't visit everybody, but many know its howl. Sometimes you know it is coming and can thump it with a baseball bat and toss it back outside, but other times it sinks the teeth in and won't let go. A damn shame Robin couldn't shake it on this occasion.

one of his best and most obscure

 

1621887_10152636845330856_12309755998124

one of his best and most obscure
1621887_10152636845330856_12309755998124


Is that the one where his missus is giving some other guy a Brendan Goddard in the back of a parked car, and then Williams rams his car into the back of it, so the missus pretty much 'bites it off?'

I'll be honest with you, I've never seen Good Morning, Vietnam, Dead Poets Society or Good Will Hunting.

 

But I have seen plenty of Mork n Mindy.

Wow, you have missed out Dig, you need to watch them.

 

I'm really upset by this. Just the other day I re-watched Good Will Hunting with my girlfriend to show her how good it was and all I was doing was ranting about how good he was and how he made the movie.
GWH is my 2nd favourite movie ever, and I loved him in it.
Insomnia is in my top 10, a cracking movie, and he is incredible in it.
One Hour Photo, not sure if I liked it or loved it but every bit of praise I have for that film was due to him. He was so good in it.
And he was the reason I used to watch Law and Order SVU, he was the antagonist in the 200th episode and smashed it.
He was very good in serious roles I think.


I totally forgot he was in insomnia.
Cracking film.

 

Insomnia is average at best. The original Swedish (?) version with the same same title, featuring Stellan Skarsgard made in 1997 is superior to it in every way, and is one of the three best movies l have seen this year. Fisher King was very good and showed his versatility, not just a comic. 

I'm really upset by this. Just the other day I re-watched Good Will Hunting with my girlfriend to show her how good it was and all I was doing was ranting about how good he was and how he made the movie.

 

GWH is my 2nd favourite movie ever, and I loved him in it.

Insomnia is in my top 10, a cracking movie, and he is incredible in it.

One Hour Photo, not sure if I liked it or loved it but every bit of praise I have for that film was due to him. He was so good in it.

And he was the reason I used to watch Law and Order SVU, he was the antagonist in the 200th episode and smashed it. 

 

He was very good in serious roles I think.

One Hour Photo was pretty good. Scary.

 

one of his best and most obscure
1621887_10152636845330856_12309755998124


Is that the one where his missus is giving some other guy a Brendan Goddard in the back of a parked car, and then Williams rams his car into the back of it, so the missus pretty much 'bites it off?'

 

yep... ouch...

 

I'm really upset by this. Just the other day I re-watched Good Will Hunting with my girlfriend to show her how good it was and all I was doing was ranting about how good he was and how he made the movie.

 

GWH is my 2nd favourite movie ever, and I loved him in it.

Insomnia is in my top 10, a cracking movie, and he is incredible in it.

One Hour Photo, not sure if I liked it or loved it but every bit of praise I have for that film was due to him. He was so good in it.

And he was the reason I used to watch Law and Order SVU, he was the antagonist in the 200th episode and smashed it. 

 

He was very good in serious roles I think.

One Hour Photo was pretty good. Scary.

 

Just like in Insomnia and SVU he has that incredible ability to put on that sheepish, innocent, "don't you just want to like me, I'm so harmless" smile, and juxtaposed with the expressionless emptiness he has shown in the character at other times, or what we as an audience know about his character, it can be pretty chilling. All those dark roles he played the same way but I wouldn't take a single point off him for that. It worked so well.

 

I remember the scene in One Hour Photo where he sits at the food court eating by himself sipping that drink and reading, and when he not-so-subtly tries to connect with the mother and says "I've known your son for so long, I almost feel like Uncle Sy", and laughs, he does that so well I think I rewound that line maybe 10 times.

Dead Poets Society was amazing.

 

Carpe Diem!

 

Seize The Day!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_N6ezGK8XE

 

Even now, having watched it at school all those years ago, that scene still gives me goosebumps.

The more I think about this the more dreadfully sad it makes me.
This is a brilliant article written by a brilliant man (IMO). Give it a read, even if you're not a fan of his.

 

 

ROBIN WILLIAMS' DIVINE MADNESS WILL NO LONGER DISRUPT THE SADNESS OF THE WORLD

Russell Brand

The Guardian, Wednesday 13 August 2014

 

Robin-Williams-as-Mork--009.jpg

 

I‘d been thinking about Robin Williams a bit recently. His manager Larry Bresner told me that when Robin was asked by a German journalist on a press junket why the Germans had a reputation for humourlessness that Williams replied, “Because you killed all the funny people.”

 

Robin Williams was exciting to me because he seemed to be sat upon a geyser of comedy. Like he didn‘t manufacture it laboriously within but had only to open a valve and it would come bursting through in effervescent jets. He was plugged into the mains of comedy.

 

I was aware too that this burbling and manic man-child that I watched on the box on my Nan‘s front room floor with a Mork action figure (I wish I still had that, he came in a plastic egg) struggled with mental illness and addiction. The chaotic clarity that lashed like an electric cable, that razzed and sparked with amoral, puckish wonder was in fact harvested madness. A refinement of an energy that could turn as easily to destruction as creativity.

 

He spoke candidly about his mental illness and addiction, how he felt often on a precipice of self-destruction, whether through substance misuse or some act of more certain finality. I thought that this articulate acknowledgement amounted to a kind of vaccine against the return of such diseased thinking, which has proven to be hopelessly naive.

 

When someone gets to 63 I imagined, hoped, I suppose, that maturity would grant an immunity to adolescent notions of suicide but today I read that suicide isn‘t exclusively a young man‘s game. Robin Williams at 63 still hadn‘t come to terms with being Robin Williams.

 

Now I am incapable of looking back at my fleeting meeting with him with any kind of objectivity, I am bound to apply, with hindsight, some special significance to his fragility, meekness and humility. Hidden behind his beard and kindness and compliments was a kind of awkwardness, like he was in the wrong context or element, a fallen bird on a hard floor.

 

It seems that Robin Williams could not find a context. Is that what drug use is? An attempt to anaesthetise against a reality that constantly knocks against your nerves, like tinfoil on an old school filling, the pang an urgent message to a dormant, truer you.

 

Is it melancholy to think that a world that Robin Williams can‘t live in must be broken? To tie this sad event to the overarching misery of our times? No academic would co-sign a theory in which the tumult of our fractured and unhappy planet is causing the inherently hilarious to end their lives, though I did read that suicide among the middle-aged increased inexplicably in 1999 and has been rising ever since. Is it a condition of our era?

 

Poor Robin Williams, briefly enduring that lonely moment of morbid certainty where it didn‘t matter how funny he was or who loved him or how many lachrymose obituaries would be written. I feel bad now that I was unduly and unbefittingly snooty about that handful of his films that were adjudged unsophisticated and sentimental. He obviously dealt with a pain that was impossible to render and ultimately insurmountable, the sentimentality perhaps an accompaniment to his childlike brilliance.

 

We sort of accept that the price for that free-flowing, fast-paced, inexplicable comic genius is a counterweight of solitary misery. That there is an invisible inner economy that demands a high price for breathtaking talent. For me genius is defined by that irrationality; how can he talk like that? Play like that? Kick a ball like that? A talent that was not sculpted and schooled, educated and polished but bursts through the portal, raw and vulgar. Always mischievous, always on the brink of going wrong, dangerous and fun, like drugs.

 

Robin Williams could have tapped anyone in the western world on the shoulder and told them he felt down and they would have told him not to worry, that he was great, that they loved him. He must have known that. He must have known his wife and kids loved him, that his mates all thought he was great, that millions of strangers the world over held him in their hearts, a hilarious stranger that we could rely on to anarchically interrupt, the all-encompassing sadness of the world. Today Robin Williams is part of the sad narrative that we used to turn to him to disrupt.

 

What platitudes then can we fling along with the listless, insufficient wreaths at the stillness that was once so animated and wired, the silence where the laughter was? That fame and accolades are no defence against mental illness and addiction? That we live in a world that has become so negligent of human values that our brightest lights are extinguishing themselves? That we must be more vigilant, more aware, more grateful, more mindful? That we can‘t tarnish this tiny slice of awareness that we share on this sphere amidst the infinite blackness with conflict and hate?

 

That we must reach inward and outward to the light that is inside all of us? That all around us people are suffering behind masks less interesting than the one Robin Williams wore? Do you have time to tune in to Fox News, to cement your angry views to calcify the certain misery?

What I might do is watch Mrs Doubtfire. Or Dead Poets Society or Good Will Hunting and I might be nice to people, mindful today how fragile we all are, how delicate we are, even when fizzing with divine madness that seems like it will never expire.

 

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/aug/12/russell-brand-robin-williams-divine-madness-broken-world

http://www.wtfpod.com/podcast/episodes/remembering_robin_williams

For those podcast listeners out there, or even just really big fans of Robin. Marc maron has done a tribute episode, and replayed his interview with Williams from a few years back.

He gets pretty deep about many of his Demons. It’s quite the listen.

 

What was the one where he played the freaky photo processing bloke?


One hour photo.
He was creepy as hell in that.

 

Yep, genuinely disturbing. Remember leaving the cinema feeling uncomfortable like you'd found out someone you trusted turned out to be someone entirely different.

Will give his film 'What Dreams may come' a run on the weekend. For those that haven't seen it the subject matter is suicide.

Ive never seen Good Will Hunting or Dead Poets Society so I might give one of them a work out tonight.