General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsActor Donald Sutherland has died.
Link to tweet
He was 88. He played a lot of memorable roles, although I think the first one that got my attention was his "Mr. X" character from JFK. Mainly because he was playing a CIA agent and physically resembled the father of a family friend, who was a former CIA agent.
(Yes, JFK might have been nearly pure fiction, and Oliver Stone turned out to be a despot ass-kisser, but Stone's movies of the late 80s and 90s were entertaining as hell.)
Aristus
(68,936 posts)He's been one of my favorite actors for almost as long as I can remember. I remember he really creeped me out in "Invasion Of The Body Snatchers", but then he won my heart as the sympathetic father in "Ordinary People". Since then, I've enjoyed everything I've seen him in. He was one of a kind.
Probatim
(3,072 posts)Damn that movie was something else.
LakeArenal
(29,934 posts)Afraid to be snatched by my ankles.
Even if that didnt happen in the movie.
Probatim
(3,072 posts)My younger brother would be scared shitless for most of the movies. Our younger sister was fearless and would try to scare him during the movies. I was somewhere the middle.
We watched the original Invasion of the Body Snatchers on a Saturday night and the later version probably on prime time TV. Both were creepy as hell.
The movie that scared me the most on Chiller Theater was The Flesh Eaters. To this day, I get a little squirrely when something brushes against me in the water - maybe a bit more than squirrely when it's murky water.
dexdah
(51 posts)MyOwnPeace
(17,287 posts)Chiller Theater and Studio Wrestling!
John1956PA
(3,579 posts)Mr. Cardile hit the right tone for that era. As the format changed over the years and regular supporting characters arrived, he took on more of a comical demeanor.
Dave Bowman
(4,418 posts)movie I saw him in. Great actor.
MustLoveBeagles
(12,861 posts)marble falls
(62,862 posts)FalloutShelter
(12,982 posts)Pass gently Donald.
Mr.WeRP
(698 posts)The first film of his I remember is Invasion of the Body Snatchers
sheshe2
(89,173 posts)We are grateful for all you have given us.
KT2000
(21,108 posts)He was so unique and recognizable but convincing in all his roles. How did he do that?
LW1977
(1,442 posts)RockRaven
(16,770 posts)No, not that Homer Simpson or that Hawkeye Pierce who you know from episodic television, the ones from The Day of the Locust (1975) and M*A*S*H (1970) respectively.
sinkingfeeling
(53,762 posts)mnhtnbb
(32,247 posts)Such a wonderful actor. He left a marvelous record of his work.
Condolences to his family.
PJMcK
(23,258 posts)Sutherland, along with the screenwriter Ring Lardner, Jr., created the character of Hawkeye Pierce. A great actor!
twodogsbarking
(12,498 posts)RIP and thanks.
Wounded Bear
(61,165 posts)EYESORE 9001
(27,757 posts)One hell of an introduction to an actors work, must say. Ive been a fan ever since.
Sneederbunk
(15,589 posts)DENVERPOPS
(10,617 posts)I thought that was his best performance ever......And the actress who played his wife was incredible at making us hate her......
Mary Tyler Moore.....I knew I would think of her name.......Timothy Hutton and Judd Hirsh also did a stellar job with their roles.....
highplainsdem
(53,571 posts)debm55
(41,391 posts)Liberal In Texas
(14,820 posts)RIP
KS Toronado
(20,330 posts)DFW
(57,083 posts)I dont recall one role he didnt make look like it was written for him. A true master of his art.
shelshaw
(613 posts)Botany
(73,018 posts)underpants
(188,269 posts)He was the only established star in that movie. Lamppon offered his a percentage of the gross. He turned it down because no one knew how it would do. No main stars. Belushi was on SNL but TV didnt equal box office then. Lampoons first movie.
He took something like $80K for 3 scenes I think in just a few days.
Xavier Breath
(5,268 posts)ended up costing him something like $14 million. In the immortal words of Frank Barone: holy crap!
yardwork
(65,230 posts)I said that line to my kids many times when they were growing up.
bif
(24,528 posts)"The Man on the Train." Weird movie but he was great as always.
Ohio Joe
(21,894 posts)maveric
(16,740 posts)He great in Klute too.
dweller
(25,457 posts)2 of my favorites
. KLUTE and STEELYARD BLUES
Going to miss him 😔
Edit: interesting how Wiki lists him as a Canadian actor and anti war activist first , then later points out that he was listed on an NSA watchlist for anti war activity at request of CIA
✌🏻
ZZenith
(4,339 posts)bedazzled
(1,861 posts)He played a great bad guy, too, in "Eye of the Needle"
Bayard
(24,182 posts)Saw him in M.A.S.H first, then so many other great roles.
Poor Sutherland family! Just lost their mom a few years ago.
Joinfortmill
(17,053 posts)Easterncedar
(3,774 posts)With Gene Wilder. So much fun.
I am sad about this. He was great.
ms liberty
(9,925 posts)Abolishinist
(2,150 posts)and also A Few Good Men, which his son Kiefer William Frederick Dempsey George Rufus Sutherland is in.
I'm adding Klute and Don't Look Now to my Watchlist.
SharonAnn
(13,925 posts)Abolishinist
(2,150 posts)I'm looking forward to watching both of them!
Coventina
(28,092 posts)I always had him cast in my imaginary production of a serious version of "Hogan's Heroes."
I thought he'd make a great Col. Klink, bringing interesting complexity to the role.
Sgt. Shultz would be played by John Goodman, of course!
Hogan would be Harrison Ford, DUH!!
Louie Anderson would be Burkhalter
Ralph Fiennes would be Hochstetter
Denzel Washington would be Kinch, that's a no brainer!!
The bumbling Col. Crittendon would be Mr. Bean, of course!
Newkirk would be Alan Cumming
LeBeau is a tough one, never had a perfect vision on that one.
Carter would be Robert Downey Jr. (he, Cumming, and Fiennes would obviously be younger, relative to the rest of the cast. Which all of them would be younger, obviously, at the time I was mentally casting this production!!)
I'm realizing that if I were to cast it now, it would have to be all different actors....
Beartracks
(13,659 posts)What a cast!
===============
Coventina
(28,092 posts)ancianita
(39,414 posts)Tommy Carcetti
(43,684 posts)
and yet also thoroughly entertaining.
I forgot he was in that.
ancianita
(39,414 posts)It holds up on repeat watches. I mean, Roland Emmerich, right??
bedazzled
(1,861 posts)He was so sexy in that!
edbermac
(16,137 posts)marked50
(1,458 posts)bdamomma
(67,234 posts)some great actors in that movie. I will have to do a binge on Mr. Sutherlands best movies.
Mr. Evil
(3,018 posts)M*A*S*H
Kelly's Heroes
The Dirty Dozen
Space Cowboys
Eye Of The Needle (for those of you that have not seen this one, it's a thriller set during WWII - excellent movie)
R.I.P. Donald. "Woof woof! That's my other dog imitation."
captain queeg
(11,780 posts)I didnt watch the whole thing but in the first part he played an evil part very convincing.
Mr. Evil
(3,018 posts)He was definitely the bad guy. Kate Nelligan also did an excellent job in the lead female role.
WheelWalker
(9,266 posts)Just watched it this weekend fact.
rockbluff botanist
(360 posts)His Invasion of the Body Snatchers gave me nightmares and still does and I'm not a kid like I was then!
He had the most arresting features and those icy blue eyes were stunning. He was the progenitor of some awesome talent, too.
Mr. Sutherland, you will be missed.
crickets
(26,158 posts)Tarzanrock
(595 posts)I've always thought that Klute was his best role.
John1956PA
(3,579 posts)Director Nicolas Roeg deliverers a chilling masterpiece wherein ghastly events are afoot in off-season Venice, Italy. The intimate scene between the two stars is legendary. Mr. Sutherland stated that the scene was filmed over a weekend in England when he was afflicted with a flu virus. One of Mr. Sutherland's five children is named Roeg.
Blaukraut
(5,933 posts)Saw it as a kid (my parents let me watch just about anything) and it has left a permanent impression on me.
RIP, Mr. Sutherland. You were amazing.
John1956PA
(3,579 posts)Roeg was ingenious with the nuances (e.g. the uncovering of the gargoyle statue which was a foreshadowing). The plot contains some random threads which may or may not connect (e.g., the Bishop steps on and crumbles the so-called valuable mosaic pieces which the church purchased from the quarry owned by the Bishop's brother. Mr. Sutherland's character (John Baxter) realizes the church is an architectural fraud and, lo and behold, bad things start to happen to him. Who has the means to orchestrate mishaps? Hint: Someone who hears of lots of dirty deeds by way of the confessional box. Altogether, a multi-level film which continues to captivate upon reflection.
MustLoveBeagles
(12,861 posts)Odd but compelling film. He was great as always.
LakeArenal
(29,934 posts)💐
orleans
(35,537 posts)don't look now was billed as a "psychic thriller"
music video with kate bush: cloudbusting
Tarzanrock
(595 posts)allegorical oracle
(3,877 posts)leftyladyfrommo
(19,514 posts)favorites.
All those fabulous actors are dying. Sigh.
Skittles
(161,399 posts)life long crush on that stud
iluvtennis
(21,023 posts)Ellipsis
(9,195 posts)Grumpy Old Guy
(3,671 posts)He was great in MASH!
PortTack
(35,169 posts)TexasBushwhacker
(20,809 posts)He was absolutely made to be an actor.
Harker
(15,443 posts)A lot of fun, and some remarkable acting.
nuxvomica
(13,113 posts)I loved that movie so much as a kid that I made an audio recording of it off the TV.
Harker
(15,443 posts)Another with Christopher Lee!
John1956PA
(3,579 posts)The characters were riding on a train, and the fortune teller used tarot cards to conjure up some chilling stories.
John1956PA
(3,579 posts). . to pose as a general traveling incognito.
nuxvomica
(13,113 posts)The tarot reader (Peter Cushing) would use the deck to predict each passenger's future encounter with the supernatural. There were five stories: a werewolf story, a voodoo story, an evil plant, a disembodied hand, and a vampire story. The last one starred Sutherland. I think the whole movie is available for free on Youtube.
John1956PA
(3,579 posts)I was about eleven years old. I looked it up on the Web some time ago. It is an okay feature.
Ford_Prefect
(8,261 posts)He was in so many more.... I will miss his sly, dry delivery.
chowder66
(10,084 posts)What a loss. R.I.P. to a truly great talent.
Talitha
(7,500 posts)Niagara
(10,068 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(177,182 posts)One of the acting greats and a good man who believed in humanity.
I'm going to watch "Don't Look Now" in his memory.
dflprincess
(28,624 posts)Of course, any scene he was in in any movie was good. Sorry to see him go,
lpbk2713
(43,203 posts)It cracks me up every time I see this.
geardaddy
(25,380 posts)Xavier Breath
(5,268 posts)I remember that great interview they had with him on 60 Minutes a few years ago.
forgotmylogin
(7,713 posts)With all due respect, I hate that as I get older I'm always most interested knowing at what age a celebrity died, adding it to my personal actuarial table that determines how much gas I might have left on this rock....
Cha
(306,749 posts)from Kiefer. 💕
TY RIP Donald Sutherland
Martin68
(24,887 posts)Martin68
(24,887 posts)Als, he was great in The Stuntman.
oasis
(51,917 posts)in films. Rest in peace.
larwdem
(850 posts)liberalmuse
(18,876 posts)I loved his work and he was one of the rare actors I crushed on. Very sad news.
WarGamer
(16,142 posts)And really great guys, too.
Different Drummer
(8,947 posts)BigmanPigman
(52,537 posts)TSExile
(3,363 posts)He should have been Oscar-nominated for the role (not that he would have edged out DeNiro, but still)...Agree that TCM should have a Donald Sutherland movie marathon. All love to Kiefer and the rest of the family...
Lulu KC
(6,155 posts)My response was, "He's so young!" RIP, young man.
bearsfootball516
(6,545 posts)I remember him from his role as President Snow in the Hunger Games trilogy, a role that he absolutely nailed beautifully. He managed to send chills down your spine every time he spoke, despite never having to raise his voice.
WestMichRad
(1,977 posts)Absolutely nailed the many roles he played. One of my favorites was Hawkeye Pierce in MASH, a movie Ive enjoyed several times.
He was never nominated for an Academy Award, but received an honorary award from them in 2017. To which he said I dont deserve this, but I have arthritis and I dont deserve that either.
LaMouffette
(2,362 posts)Extremely poignant story about a couple in their twilight years. I recommend it highly, but be prepared to cry.
RIP, Donald Sutherland, and thank you for all of your amazing films!
TNNurse
(7,207 posts)Glad someone mentioned Hawkeye Pierce in MASH.
area51
(12,229 posts)Beartracks
(13,659 posts)RIP, Mr. Sutherland.
======================
Dem2theMax
(10,551 posts)His passing is a great loss. But what a body of work to leave behind.
Saw him once at LAX. He was wearing a very long, black trench coat. You couldn't miss him. I didn't dare go up and say hello or ask for an autograph. I just admired him from afar.
RIP Donald Sutherland.
Skittles
(161,399 posts)well done Donald - he was truly one of a kind
DemocraticPatriot
(5,410 posts)second as the father in 'Ordinary People'.
Seems that I missed a lot of his movies, although I recognize the titles--
and never have seen ANY of the 'Hunger Games' films,
still have no idea what that was about.
After having watched Alan Alda for centuries as "Hawkeye" on the M*A*S*H television series,
I could not adjust to Sutherland in the role in the original film, when I finally saw it....
I did enjoy one of the latter films he did, co-starring as the father of his son Kiefer--- a civil war times period piece,
can't remember the title now...
Rest in peace, Donald.
calimary
(85,081 posts)One of the greats. Gone. Dammit.
C Moon
(12,673 posts)allegorical oracle
(3,877 posts)The Great Train Robbery...he rode in a casket with a dead cat...
The Eye of the Needle...he was a ruthless Nazi spy...
Love it when an actor has loads of scope -- and he certainly did.
Very sad.
BobTheSubgenius
(11,847 posts)One of the greatest character actors of our time, and I'll miss him. Great comedic actor, charming rogue, sinister protagonist, he was always convincing whatever the role.
Something about that family always interested me. His second wife, and mother of Keifer and his twin sister Rachel, was the daughter of Tommy Douglas, who was voted the Greatest Canadian ever by a nationwide poll that went on for months. Tommy Douglas was the man most responsible for bringing universal health care to Canada. His slogan was "Beware the little man with a big idea."
Illustrious family, for sure. In a very Canadian way.
Beringia
(4,796 posts)Memorable for me is Ordinary People and Klute
MustLoveBeagles
(12,861 posts)He was one of a kind
bdamomma
(67,234 posts)He was a great actor, Kiefer has a lot to be proud of his dad's achievements.
Can't forget" Invasion of the Body Snatchers".