Release Date: Sept. 9
Director: Stuart Rosenberg
Writers: Donn Pearce, Frank Pierson
Cinematographer:
Conrad Hall
Starring: Paul Newman, George Kennedy, Harry Dean Stanton, Strother Martin
Studio/Run Time:
Warner Home Video, 126 mins.
Newman has aged well
Stuart Rosenberg's 1967 classic Cool
Hand Luke has left a heavy footprint in our pop-culture conscience. A
sampling of its many iconic moments includes Boss Godfrey's mirrored
aviators, the hardboiled-egg-eating contest and Strother Martin
drawling, "What we've got here is a failure to communicate." But that's
just the tip of the iceberg. Newly remastered on DVD and Blu-ray, this
deluxe edition features a "making-of" documentary and audio commentary
from writer Eric Lax. But it's Paul Newman's exhilaratingly understated
performance as the existential title character that anchors the film.
Unlike Brando or Redford, Newman was a master at softening his
masculinity without sacrificing virility. His anti-authoritarianism
quietly burns as he first spars then bonds with his fellow prison-camp
inmates, all the while planning his escape. Forty years later, Cool
Hand Luke feels as fresh and vibrant as it did in the turbulent era of
its initial release.
Published at 4:00 PM on November 12, 2008


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